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MWSU’s Juergens named MIAA Defensive Player of the Week

MWSUMissouri Western senior linebacker Stephen Juergens has been named the MIAA Defensive Athlete of the Week. It’s the first time Juergens has received the honor.

The Kearney, Missouri native came up big for the Griffon defense in his final game. Juergens tallied 13 total tackles, three for loss and a sack. His third tackle for loss stopped Missouri Southern on a fourth down play that sealed the 22-21 victory for Missouri Western.

For the third straight season, Juergens led Missouri Western in tackles with 108 total stops. His 59 solo tackles were best on the team by 15 and his 12 tackles for loss were the most of any Griffon defender. He also had 3.5 sacks, two quarterback hurries a fumble recovery and an interception.

Juergens joins fellow Missouri Western linebacker Kirk Resseguie and safety Marc Harrison as the three Griffons to receive the award this year. Kicker John Schmiemeier was also named the MIAA Special Teams Athlete of the Week twice this year.

Western finished the 2014 season 7-4.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri’s Hansbrough earns weekly SEC honor

riggertMizzouUniversity of Missouri junior running back Russell Hansbrough (Arlington, Texas) has been named the Southeastern Conference’s football Offensive Player of the Week for his performance Saturday at Texas A&M, as announced tonight by the league office.

Hansbrough, playing in his home state of Texas, led Mizzou to a huge 34-27 road win at #24 Texas A&M Saturday evening, thanks to his career-high 199 rushing yards.  He averaged 9.9 yards per carry (20 attempts), which included touchdown runs of 49 and 45 yards on consecutive 3rd-quarter possessions as the Tigers rallied from a 13-6 halftime deficit.

Hansbrough’s 199-yard outing marked the most rushing yards by a Tiger running back in a conference game since Oct. 10, 1998, when All-American Devin West ran for 252 yards (on 40 carries, 6.3 avg.) at Iowa State.  Hansbrough’s total is the 6th-highest output by a tailback in Mizzou history in a conference game, and it is the 10th-highest single-game rushing total among tailbacks (any opponent).  The 199 yards ranks 13th on Mizzou’s all-time single-game rushing chart (all positions included).

Thanks to Hansbrough’s career night (surpassing his previous best of 126 yards vs. South Dakota State on Aug. 30, 2014), Mizzou ran for a season-high 335 yards, surpassing the previous season mark of 244 yards (Vanderbilt), while amassing a season-best 587 yards of total offense in the A&M win.

Hansbrough leads Mizzou with 790 rushing yards and nine touchdowns on the year, while he’s averaging 5.6 yards per attempt.  He now ranks 10th in the SEC in rushing with his 79.0 yards per game.

This marks the seventh time a Tiger has won a weekly SEC award in 2014.  The list of winners includes: Offensive Player of the Week – Maty Mauk (Sept. 6), Russell Hansbrough (Nov. 15); Defensive Player of the Week – Shane Ray (Sept. 13); Defensive Lineman of the Week – Shane Ray (Sept. 27, Oct. 18, Nov. 1); Special Teams Player of the Week – Marcus Murphy (Oct. 18).

— MU Sports Information —

Four Jayhawks named to Wooden Award Preseason Top 50

riggertKUFour Kansas men’s basketball players were named to the Wooden Award Preseason Top 50, the Los Angeles Athletic Club announced Monday. Junior forward Perry Ellis, sophomore guard Wayne Selden, Jr., and freshmen Cliff Alexander and Kelly Oubre, Jr., were named to the preseason squad. Selden was also named to the Wooden Award Preseason Top 50 last year.

Kansas and Kentucky were the only two schools with four individuals named to the 2014 50-man list. Alexander and Oubre were two of seven freshmen on the list and the Big 12 Conference led the way with 10 picks.

Ellis and Selden are KU’s returning starters from 2013-14, where the Jayhawks won their unprecedented 10th-straight Big 12 regular-season championship going 25-10 and 14-4 in league play. Ellis posted his seventh career double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds in KU’s 69-59 season-opening win versus UC Santa Barbara on Nov. 14. The Wichita, Kansas, native is KU’s leading returning scorer at 13.5 points per game in 2013-14, and rebounder at 6.7 boards per contest.

Selden, from Roxbury, Massachusetts, scored 10 points in the season opener and averaged 9.7 points per game his rookie season at KU. He and Ellis were named to the 2014 All-Big 12 squad with Ellis a third-team selection and Selden honorable mention. The duo also earned weekly conference honors during the 2013-14 season.

Alexander and Oubre were each named 2014 McDonald’s All-Americans. A power forward from Chicago who was ranked No. 3 by ESPN100, Alexander was the 2014 Naismith High School National Player of the Year and Mr. Basketball USA. He scored nine points and pulled down four rebounds in his KU debut against UC Santa Barbara. Oubre, from New Orleans, was ranked No. 11 by ESPN100 and both he and Alexander competed for Team USA at the Nike Hoop Summit and the Jordan Brand Classic in the spring 2014. Additionally, Oubre was invited to work at the Kevin Durant Skills Academy and the adidas Nation’s camps in the summer of 2014.

Last year, KU’s Selden, Andrew Wiggins and Joel Embiid were named to the Wooden Award Preseason Top 50. Wiggins ended being selected to the 10-member Wooden All-American Team.

No. 5/5 Kansas (1-0) will face top-ranked Kentucky (2-0) in the State Farm Champions Classic, Tuesday, Nov. 18, at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, at 8 p.m. (Central). The two teams met in the 2011 Champions Classic and later squared off in the 2012 NCAA Championship game in New Orleans.

— KU Sports Information —

KU’s Mundine named one of eight semifinalists for Mackey Award

riggertKUKansas senior Jimmay Mundine was named one of eight semi-finalists for the John Mackey Award Monday morning, it was announced by The John Mackey Award. Mundine is the first Kansas player to be named a semi-finalist for the award, which has been in existence since 2000.

A native of Denison, Texas, Mundine recorded a career-best tying seven receptions for a career-high 137 yards and a touchdown, leading the Jayhawks in receptions and receiving yards in their near-upset of fifth-ranked TCU in their last outing. Mundine’s 137-yard receiving performance was the most for a Kansas tight end since 1974.

Mundine is having a strong senior campaign as he leads all Big 12 Conference tight ends and ranks fourth nationally among the position group with his 537 receiving yards on 40 catches. He is averaging 13.4 yards per catch in 2014 and has scored three touchdowns. His 537 receiving yards are the most by a tight end from a ‘Power 5’ conference and his 40 receptions ranks second among tight ends from a ‘Power 5′ conference. Mundine has been critical to Kansas’ offensive improvement as 30 of his 40 receptions have resulted in first downs or touchdowns.

Mundine was named the John Mackey Award Tight End of the Week following his performance against Central Michigan. He has picked up honorable mention John Mackey Award Tight End of the Week honors twice this season, following games at Texas Tech and against Iowa State.

Joining Mundine as a semi-finalist for the John Mackey Award are E.J. Bibbs (SR, Iowa State), Evan Engram (SO, Ole Miss), Ben Koyack (SR, Notre Dame), Nick O’Leary (SR, Florida State), Jean Sifrin (JR, Massachusetts), Clive Walford (SR, Miami) and Maxx Williams (SO, Minnesota).

The eight semi-finalists were determined by confidential balloting of the John Mackey Award
Selection Committee. Given annually to the most outstanding collegiate tight end, the 2014 John Mackey Award recipient will be announced on December 10, 2014 and presented live on December 11, 2014 at The Home Depot College Football Awards Show on ESPNU. The 2014 Mackey finalists will be announced on November 24, 2014.

NFL Hall of Fame member John Mackey is considered to be the best to have played the tight end position. A tight end by whom all others are measured, Mackey was a role model on and off the field as demonstrated by his Super Bowl Championship, his commitment to community and his place in history as the first President of the NFLPA.

The John Mackey Award is a member of the National College Football Awards Association (NCFAA) which encompasses the most prestigious awards in college football. The 21 awards boast 678 years of tradition-selection excellence.

— KU Sports Information —

Tigers defeat Valpo as Anderson gets first win at Missouri

riggertMizzouCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Kim Anderson says his team is a work in progress. But after a disappointing season opener, he can now rest a little easier after a 56-41 win against Valparaiso on Sunday.

“Friday night was an embarrassment, not to take anything away from” Missouri-Kansas City, the first-year Missouri coach said about his team’s 69-61 loss. “To lose at home in your first game, I think our guys were somewhat tentative.”

That tentativeness showed up again in the team’s first half against Valparaiso, as the Tigers led 24-23 at the break despite no player converting more than one field goal. The team finally gained some separation with a 14-2 run to take a 41-29 lead with 9:47 remaining.

Valparaiso never could get closer than seven the rest of the way.

Wes Clark scored 16 points to lead Missouri (1-1) while Johnathan Williams III added 10.

Anderson thought his team started to play more aggressively in the second half by attacking the middle of the court, rather than simply passing around the perimeter. The Tigers made 10 of their first 18 shots after the break and finished 20 of 50 for the game.

“I think we’re coming together more as a team,” Williams said. “Just trying to learn about each other more and bond together as a team.”

E. Victor Nickerson led Valparaiso (1-1) with 12 points while Alec Peters added seven. Peters earned All-Freshman honors in the Horizon League last year with 12.7 points per game, but only played 27 minutes against Missouri because of foul trouble.

Peters collected two fouls in the first 2:55 and then another with 6:06 left in the opening half. He added a fourth 4 1/2 minutes after the break.

“There’s no question it took us out of what we wanted,” Drew said.

Both teams started 3 of 13 from the field, preventing either from leading by more than five in the first half. But the Crusaders couldn’t keep up in the closing half, as coach Bryce Drew said his team was “worn down” by Missouri’s size.

“When you get tired, I think a lot of our shots became short at the end just from fatigue,” he said. “I thought that definitely played a role in those last 10 minutes of the game.”

TIP-INS

Valparaiso: The Crusaders haven’t defeated a major-conference team since Washington in 2008 and won’t face another this regular season. They were picked to finish fourth in the Horizon League after finishing in the same position last year.

Missouri: Attendance was announced at 5,369, slightly more than a third of Mizzou Arena’s capacity, after about a half-inch of snow fell earlier in the day. . Freshman Jakeenan Gant missed his second consecutive game while the school reviews his eligibility.

FREE THROWS

Although Anderson said his team played more aggressively, the Tigers only shot 14 free throws, two fewer than against UMKC. The team converted 12 of them, though, compared with Valparaiso’s seven-of-12 performance from the charity stripe.

MISSING OFFENSE

Valparaiso won its opener Friday 90-76 against East Tennessee State thanks to 50 percent (26 of 52) shooting, including 10 of 18 from 3-point range. But the offense never could find its rhythm at Missouri without Peters consistently on the floor, finishing 33 percent (15 of 46) from the field.

QUOTE OF THE NIGHT

“We definitely needed a win,” Clark said. “We didn’t know exactly where we stood before that game on Friday. It just woke us up some, made us a little bit more aware of where we needed to go and how to get there.”

UP NEXT

Valparaiso hosts Indiana-South Bend on Wednesday.

Missouri hosts Oral Roberts on Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

Chiefs hold off defending champion Seahawks for fifth straight win

riggertChiefsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The old offensive line coach in Andy Reid could appreciate the way the Kansas City Chiefs pried open holes for Jamaal Charles to run free against Seattle on Sunday.

He could appreciate the way their defensive front stepped up, too.

Given a lead thanks largely to the legs of their dazzling running back, the Chiefs held the Seahawks on fourth down three times in the final quarter. The result was a tense 24-20 victory that pushed Kansas City into a first-place tie with the Denver Broncos in the AFC West.

“We’re sitting there with three fourth-down plays late in the game,” Reid said, “and they stepped up and did a phenomenal job there getting off the field.”

As for Charles, who finished with 159 yards and two touchdowns?

“He’s Jamaal Charles,” Reid said. “He’s a special player.”

Russell Wilson threw for 178 yards and two TDs for the Seahawks, and Marshawn Lynch had 124 yards rushing. But Lynch, fresh off a four-touchdown game, was stuffed twice by the Kansas City defense with the outcome hanging in the balance.

The Seahawks’ last-chance drive ended when Wilson threw incomplete on fourth-and-18 at their 20-yard line with 1:13 left.

“They had a great defense,” Wilson said. “They just made a great play.”

The Chiefs’ first fourth-down stop came with about 6 minutes to go. Lynch was tackled after a 2-yard gain on third down, and coach Pete Carroll elected to gamble at the Chiefs 2. Wilson saw Doug Baldwin in the corner of the end zone but badly overthrew him.

Seattle (6-4) held to get the ball back and appeared to convert a third down with a completion at the Chiefs 35. Reid wisely challenged the spot, though, and replays showed wide receiver Jermaine Kearse was a full yard short. The Seahawks again went for it, and Lynch was stuffed for no gain with less than 4 minutes to go.

By the time the Seahawks got the ball back one last time, they were pinned so deep in their own territory with such little time on the clock that it hardly mattered.

Lynch left without speaking to reporters.

“Every game we’ve lost this season it seems like it’s come down to the last play, whether it’s defense or offense,” Seattle defensive end Michael Bennett said. “That’s the name of the game.”

It made sense the two playoff contenders would wage an old-school, back-and-forth affair. Both are built in the same mold, featuring stout defenses and strong running games.

Kansas City struck first with a relentless 15-play drive that took up more than 9 minutes of the first half and ended with Charles’ 1-yard touchdown run. Seattle answered with its own 16-play drive, chewing up exactly 9 minutes and ending with Wilson’s TD pass to Baldwin.

Nothing really changed the rest of the half.

Charles broke two long runs on the Chiefs’ next possession, including a 16-yard touchdown. Lynch came back with a punishing series of carries to help set up a field goal.

The Chiefs overcame two fumbles that led to Seattle scores. Travis Kelce lost the ball near midfield late in the first half, and the Seahawks capitalized with a field goal.

Then Charles was fighting for extra yardage again near midfield in the third quarter when he was stripped of the ball.

“I was doing too much,” Charles said. “I just lost it as I was going down.”

Five plays later, Wilson hit tight end Tony Moeaki — who spent most of his first four injury-plagued seasons with Kansas City — with a short touchdown toss for a 20-17 lead.

Once again turning to Charles, the Chiefs answered. The elusive running back put a nifty juke on Earl Thomas and scampered 47 yards before getting pushed out of bounds. Gassed, Charles watched as Knile Davis capped the drive to give the Chiefs a 24-20 lead.

Then he watched his defense make it stick.

“It was a heartbreaking loss,” Wilson said. “We thought we could have or should have won it.”

Game notes

Seahawks WR Ricardo Lockette was ejected in the second half for throwing a right hook at Chiefs CB Kurt Coleman. … Seattle C Max Unger was carted off with a high ankle sprain and twisted knee midway through the fourth quarter. Patrick Lewis finished in his place. … Charles had not run for 100 yards in any game this season.

— Associated Press —

Pitt State & Northwest earn NCAA Division II Football Playoff bids

MIAAPittsburg State and Northwest Missouri have both earned spots in the NCAA Division II Football Championship announced on Sunday.

Pittsburg State will face off with Harding at 1 p.m. in the opening round on Nov. 22 from Pittsburg, Kan. Northwest Missouri will go on the road to Minnesota Duluth where they will face off with the Bulldogs on Nov. 22 from Duluth, Minn. at a time to be announced later.

The Pittsburg State/Harding winner will face off with second seed Minnesota State and the Northwest Missouri/Duluth winner will travel to Ouachita Baptist in the second round.

Super Region 3 Field
1. Ouachita Baptist (Bye)
2. Minnesota State (Bye)
3. Pittsburg State
4. Minnesota Duluth
5. Northwest Missouri
6. Harding

— MIAA Press Release —

No. 21 Huskers open season with easy win over Northern Kentucky

NebraskariggertLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska’s Terran Petteway missed everything with an ill-advised shot from the wing but, thanks to an errant outlet pass, the ball ended up right back in his hands.

With no hesitation he launched a 3-pointer that swished through the hoop and left coach Tim Miles shaking his head. Assistant coach Chris Harriman remarked to Miles, “Well, he doesn’t lack confidence.”

No, he sure doesn’t.

Petteway scored 25 points, making six 3s, to lead the 21st-ranked Cornhuskers to an 80-61 victory over Northern Kentucky on Sunday.

Petteway took nearly twice as many shots as any of his teammates, making 7 of 15. That bad shot-good shot sequence in the second half summed up his afternoon.

“You take a bad shot like that and get the ball right back? That’s a good day,” he said.

Shavon Shields had 11 of his 18 points in the second half and made all 10 of his free throws. David Rivers added 12 points.

Freshman Tayler Persons led the Norse with 13 points. Anthony Monaco, averaging 2.5 points in 51 career games, matched his career high with 12, all on 3-pointers.

The Atlantic Sun’s Northern Kentucky (0-2) lost its opener 62-31 at third-ranked Wisconsin on Friday and was outscored by a combined 50 points by the Big Ten opponents.

“Those two teams are both real good, but they’re really different,” Norse coach Dave Bezold said. “Wisconsin, they want to slow you down with defense. You’re playing and you think you’re close and you look up and you’re down by 20 points.

“Nebraska, they get after you. They’re quick off the ball, they come at you hard on both ends. They’ve got guys that are skilled and they don’t quit. They hit us in bunches, and when they got going, they’re hard to deal with.”

Nebraska, ranked for the first time since January 1995, trailed by six points in the first four minutes. The Huskers used a 25-7 run to take a double-digit lead that grew to 22 in the second half.

TIP-INS

Nebraska: The Huskers have won 14 straight openers and 21 of their past 23. Petteway’s first dunk came on a fast-break alley-oop pass from Benny Parker late in the first half. Nebraska held a 22-6 advantage in points off turnovers.

Northern Kentucky: The Norse scored 30 points in the first half, one fewer than their program record-low game total against Wisconsin. They outrebounded Nebraska 36-33, including 15-6 on the offensive end. The Norse were 11 of 21 on free throws after going 1 of 5 from the line against Wisconsin.

FINE FRESHMAN

Nebraska freshman point guard Tarin Smith was impressive in his debut. He played 16 minutes off the bench, scoring six points and making a nice pass to Petteway on the wing for a 3-pointer. “He’s fitting in pretty good,” Petteway said. “He got a lot of minutes today, which is going to help him build his confidence for these games we’ve got coming up. I’m excited to see him in the rotation a little bit more.”

UP NEXT

Nebraska hosts Central Arkansas on Tuesday.

Northern Kentucky hosts North Carolina A&T on Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

Three MIAA volleyball teams qualify for NCAA Tournament

riggertMIAAThree MIAA squads will make their way to the NCAA Division II Central Volleyball Regional hosted by Minnesota Duluth beginning next week.

Central Missouri is the highest seeded MIAA team earning the fourth spot and facing fifth seed Wayne State in the opening round. Nebraska-Kearney, who was league co-champion with UCM, will be the sixth seed and face third seed Southwest Minnesota State.

Washburn has earned the seventh seed and will face off with defending National Champion Concordia St. Paul to open the tournament.

All first round games will be played on Thursday, Nov. 20 from Romano Gymnasium in Duluth, Minn.

Central Regional First Round Match-Ups
1. Minnesota Duluth
8. Arkansas Tech

5. Wayne State (Neb.)
4. Central Missouri

2. Concordia St. Paul
7. Washburn

6. Nebraska-Kearney
3. Southwest Minnesota State

— MIAA Press Release —

Griffons rally at Missouri Southern to win final game of 2014

MWSUThe Missouri Western football team put an exclamation point on the 2014 season with a 22-21 come from behind win at Missouri Southern on Saturday.

Trailing 16-7 in the fourth quarter, Missouri Southern scored two touchdowns in two minutes to take their first lead since the first quarter, 21-16.

Missouri Western took the lead back on a 10-play, 91-yard drive capped off by a 14-yard touchdown reception by Daylon Harper. With 1:49 left, the Griffon defense stopped the Lions short on a fourth and four from the Missouri Western 42 when senior linebacker Stephen Juergens drug the Southern ball carrier down at the line of scrimmage.

It was the first time Missouri Western overcame a fourth quarter deficit since the opening game of the season at home against Central Missouri.

Missouri Western gave the Lions a dose of their own medicine, controlling time of possession, by 13 minutes. Aiding the team in that statistic were two second half scoring drives over 90 yards.

Missouri Western outgained Missouri Southern 390 yards to 277 and held the MIAA’s top rushing team to just 160 yards on the ground.

Skyler Windmiller finished 15-29 for 222 yards passing with two touchdowns and no interceptions. Raphael Spencer rushed 31 times for 145 yards and one TD to move into third on the all-time rushing list at Missouri Western.

Juergens led the defense once again with 13 tackles, three tackles for loss and one sack. Yomi Alli added 11 tackles.

The win capped off Griffon Football’s 12th straight winning season in the MIAA as Missouri Western finished the 2014 season 7-4.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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