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K-State rolls past Southern Utah in opener 98-68

riggertKStateMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — With memories of last year’s season-opening 60-58 loss to Northern Colorado running through his mind, Bruce Weber wasn’t prepared to see a halftime lead disappear again.

In its second-consecutive attempt to beat a Big Sky conference opponent in their home opener, Kansas State answered in record-breaking fashion. The Wildcats shot 66.7 percent from the floor in the second half and scored the most points in the Weber era.

Nigel Johnson scored a career-high 18 points and Thomas Gipson had 17 points and six rebounds Friday to lead Kansas State over Southern Utah 98-68 in the season opener for both teams.

“We led them last year at halftime and they came back and beat us,” Weber said. “We were letting a team like that hang with us and you never know what could happen. It was a good start to the second half and we really got it going (offensively).”

The scoring performance was Kansas State’s highest since an 87-point effort against Central Arkansas on Dec. 1, 2013. It was also is the highest score for Kansas State since a 100-76 win over North Florida on Dec. 31, 2010.

A.J. Hess had 16 points, including 12 in the first half, to pace the Thunderbirds, who are coming off a 2-27 campaign in 2013-14.

Four other players scored in double figures for the Wildcats, including Marcus Foster and Tre Harris with 13 points apiece. Johnson had a career-high tying five assists.

The Wildcats opened the second half with 33-9 run, pushing their lead to 77-55 after 10 minutes and never looked back.

“We obviously shot the ball extremely well at 58 percent,” Weber said. “Our guys were patient and got it inside (and) outside. We did a better job in the second half against their zone.”

Johnson shot 3 of 4 from deep to aid the Wildcats’ offense, which gave him all nine of his second-half points.

“I’m just trying to play and let it come to me,” Johnson said. “My role is going to be different than last year. I didn’t have to score that much, but I can shoot the ball well and I can score the ball.”

Hess’ fourth foul with 15:51 in the second half limited the Thunderbirds offensively as they shot 1 of 10 during the Wildcats’ run. Southern Utah finished 20-for-49 from the field after shooting 45.8 percent in the first half (11-24).

Kansas State’s physical play took an early toll on Southern Utah, forcing the Thunderbirds into 16 first-half fouls.

Gipson chipped in 14 points in the first half while the Wildcats went 18 of 24 from the free-throw line in the first half.

Hess kept the Thunderbirds within reach with an eight-point deficit at the break and chipped in a 4-for-7 performance from 3-point range

TIP-INS

Southern Utah has now lost 28 of its last 30 games and head coach Nick Robinson falls to 13-48 overall in his three seasons with the Thunderbirds.

UP NEXT

Kansas State hosts UMKC, which won at Missouri in its season opener, on Monday and will play at Long Beach State next Friday before heading to the Maui Invitational on Nov. 24-26.

Southern Utah heads to Miami (OH) on Sunday

STAT LINES

Along with the highest-scoring total, Kansas State’s 3-point percentage (55.6) and made and attempted free throws (34-48) were the most under Weber. preseason first-team All-Big 12 selection Marcus Foster has now scored in double figures in 28 of his 34 career games.

— Associated Press —

Fall Classic moving to Maryville because of possible inclement weather

NWMSUDue to an unforeseen chain of inclement weather events expected to take place in Kansas City, Saturday’s Fall Classic has been relocated to Northwest Missouri State University in Maryville, Mo., from Arrowhead Stadium.

After consulting with the National Football League office and a thorough review of the weather forecast, our grounds crew strongly suggested eliminating any activity on the field prior to the game on Sunday. Due to the potential combination of wet snow conditions followed by below freezing temperatures, it has been recommended that the field remain covered during the forecasted precipitation on Saturday.

“We would like to express our thanks to Mel Tjeerdsma, Loren Ferré and both universities for their understanding and working with us to find a solution to this unpredictable situation,” Chiefs President Mark Donovan said.

All tickets for Saturday’s scheduled game at Arrowhead will be refunded in full at the original point of purchase. Tickets will be available at the Northwest Missouri State University Ticket Office. Ticket information for Saturday’s game will be available on both Northwest Missouri State and Washburn University’s websites later this afternoon. Kickoff time has also been changed to 1 p.m.

Any ticket-related questions for the Chiefs can be directed to (816) 920-4237.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Northwest men’s basketball signs two to 2015 recruiting class

Northwest2013riggertNorthwest Missouri State head men’s basketball coach Ben McCollum announced the additions of Grant Graham and Tyler Dougherty to the 2015-16 roster. Graham, from Eldridge, Iowa, was a standout guard at North Scott High School while Dougherty is a 6-6 forward from Papillion-LaVista High School in LaVista, Neb.

“Both of these kids really wanted to be at Northwest,” said McCollum. “They fit our culture and we think it’s extremely important having kids that want to be in our program. We are very excited about having these two young men join our basketball family.”

Graham was a second team All-Mississippi Athletic Conference performer as a junior, earning third team accolades as a freshman and honorable mention honors as a sophomore. In three seasons, Graham has compiled 622 points, 150 assists, 221 rebounds, 68 steals and eight blocked shots. He has a single game high of 26 points. North Scott has advanced to the sub-state finals all three seasons. Graham maintaines a 3.87 GPA, is a member of the National Honor Society and has earned All-MAC academic team honors all three seasons.

“Grant is a very tough and heady guard,” McCollum said. “We were impressed with his ability to always make the right play on offense. He is a very good defender, one of the best we saw in high school last year. Grant’s North Scott team is 40-6 the last two seasons and that’s one of the first things we look at when recruiting a kid. Grant will do his job in the classroom and will be a great kid in the community.”

Dougherty has helped lead the Papillion-LaVista Monarchs to a pair of Nebraska Final Four appearances. As a junior, he averaged 14 points and seven rebounds. Last season, he scored a career-best 25 points to go along with 10 rebounds against Omaha Westside. Dougherty is an all-state scholar athlete, earning all-state honorable mention honors and all-area first team accolades. He played club basketball for Omaha Sports Academy and helped lead the team to the Mullens High Profile Tournament titel in 2014 in St. Louis. A three sport standout in football and soccer in addition to basketball, Dougherty is also an honor roll student and is a member of the National Honor Society. He is the younger brother of current Bearcat redshirt freshman Brett Dougherty.

“Tyler is a strong and tough kid,” said McCollum. “He is very good at attacking the basket and finishing around the rim. He has been a part of some very successful teams at Papillion LaVista and with his AAU team the Omaha Crusaders. Tyler is a fantastic kid and comes from a great family that we already know very well through his brother Brett.”

— Northwest Sports Information —

Arrowhead Stadium to host Missouri-BYU in 2015

ChiefsThe NCAA Div. I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) returns to Kansas City in 2015 as Arrowhead Stadium will play host to a match-up between the University of Missouri Tigers and the Brigham Young University Cougars on Saturday, Nov. 14, 2015. The game will mark the first FBS game to be featured at Arrowhead Stadium since Mizzou topped Kansas 24-10 in Big 12 Conference action on Nov. 26, 2011. Kickoff time and ticket details for the game will be announced at a later date.

“We’ve been focused on bringing FBS football back to Arrowhead Stadium for some time and have investigated a number of ways to accomplish that,” Chiefs President Mark Donovan said. “We want to thank both Missouri and BYU for making this possible. We know that this will be a unique opportunity for the players, coaches and fans of both institutions to experience the iconic Arrowhead atmosphere.”

The University of Missouri, serving as the game’s home team, joined the Southeastern Conference (SEC) Eastern Division in 2012 and went on to win the SEC Eastern Division title in 2013, marking its fourth conference divisional title in the past seven seasons after claiming Big 12 North championships in 2007, 2008 and 2010. Head Coach Gary Pinkel’s squad ranks in the top 10 among the power five conferences in wins, while also ranking in the top 10 in Academic Progress Rate (APR) since 2007. The program sits in the top five for most NFL first-round draft picks since 2009. Pinkel is Mizzou’s all-time winningest coach with 109 victories in 14 seasons. He has led the program to nine bowl games in his previous 13 years, while the school has played in 30 bowl games in its history. The Tigers are no stranger to football in Kansas City, having played 30 games all-time in the city. Mizzou has played seven times inside Arrowhead Stadium, going 5-2 overall from 2005-11.

“We are very pleased to have this opportunity to bring Mizzou to Kansas City. Having a presence there is very important to us, and this game underscores our commitment to doing just that, as we indicated when we moved to the Southeastern Conference,” University of Missouri Director of Athletics Mike Alden said. “This is an exciting, high-profile game for our fans, and we’re looking forward to working with the Kansas City Chiefs and the KC Sports Commission. We know from past experiences that they will do an outstanding job of making this a special event for Tiger fans.”

Brigham Young University, the game’s visiting team, is a football independent with a record of elite-level success and tradition that includes winning the 1984 National Championship. Over the past 40 seasons, only four FBS programs–Nebraska, Oklahoma, Ohio State and Florida State–have won more games than BYU while the Cougars have advanced to 32 bowl games and earned top-25 rankings during 31 seasons. BYU boasts seven members of the College Football Hall of Fame along with a Heisman Trophy winner, seven Sammy Baugh Trophy recipients, four Davey O’Brien Award honorees, two Outland Trophy winners and a Doak Walker Award recipient. Current head coach Bronco Mendenhall has led BYU to an 87-38 record since 2005 to rank 12th in total victories while achieving a 6-3 bowl record–only Florida State has more bowl wins (seven) over the past nine seasons. Off the field, BYU is tied for fifth for the most Academic All-Americans since 2005.

“It’s a great opportunity and challenge for our football team to play such a fine school as Missouri. They are a new SEC school with a rich football tradition going back to the Big 12,” BYU Director of Athletics Tom Holmoe said. “It will also be exciting for our team to play at Arrowhead Stadium in a region of the country where we haven’t been in a while.”

As part of the agreement between the teams, the Tigers will play at Lavell Edwards Stadium on Nov. 7, 2020.

Arrowhead Stadium has played host to 36 college football games throughout its 43-year history. Most notably, the venue has hosted five Dr Pepper Big 12 Championship Games, five Border Showdown contests between Mizzou and Kansas, 13 Fall Classic games featuring Northwest Missouri State University, Pittsburg State University and Washburn University, as well as more than a dozen other contests highlighting teams from across the country.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Mizzou men’s basketball signs two to 2015 recruiting class

riggertMizzouMissouri men’s basketball coach Kim Anderson has announced two signings for the program’s 2015 recruiting class, with talented student-athletes Kevin Puryear (Blue Springs, Mo.) and Cullen VanLeer (Pacific, Mo.) inking with the Tigers. A 6-7 forward, Puryear has starred for Blue Springs South High School, averaging 19.2 points and 8.6 rebounds as a junior this past season. Standing 6-4 from the guard position, VanLeer posted a solid 21.9-point average for Pacific High School as a junior.

“We are excited about the addition of Kevin and Cullen to our program,” Anderson said. “Both come from outstanding high school and non-scholastic programs. Kevin has had the chance to play for Coach Jimmy Cain at Blue Springs South High School and L.J. Goolsby at KC Run GMC, while Cullen played for his father John at Pacific High School and Scott Schroepfer’s St. Louis Gateway program.

“They are two of the top players in the state of Missouri, and we are elated that they have decided to stay home and be members of the Tiger basketball family. Additionally, they are both high character young men who are winners.”

Puryear was a First Team All-State honoree from the Missouri Basketball Coaches Association as a junior in 2014, complimenting a standout season for South head coach Jimmy Cain. Blue Springs South was powered by Puryear to a strong 21-4 record and second round appearance in the Class 5 District Tournament. Puryear and his teammates recorded an impressive 22-2 mark and advanced to the Class 5 State Tournament during his sophomore season.

“Kevin is a versatile, combo forward who brings a great blue collar, tough mentality that fits the culture we are trying to create here at Mizzou,” Anderson said. “He can shoot it from the perimeter or go inside and mix it up. He takes great pride in being a Missouri Tiger.”

With additional junior season averages of 6.4 rebounds, 3.6 assists and 1.7 steals, VanLeer has proven to have a versatile game while playing for father and Pacific head coach John VanLeer. The younger VanLeer was honored for his well-rounded game by the MBCA, earning First Team All-State recognition as both a sophomore and junior in Class 3 and Class 4, respectively.

VanLeer’s Pacific squad posted a stout 20-5 record this past season, advancing to the second round of the Class 4 District Tournament. Pacific also made an appearance in the district tournament round during his sophomore campaign.

“Cullen meets an important need for us next year,” Anderson said. “He is an outstanding shooter with deep range and is a solid ball handler. Like Kevin, he is also an in-state kid who takes great pride in wearing the Black & Gold. With both young men, Coach Loos did an outstanding job of developing a good relationship early on, along with the rest of our staff.”

The two Show-Me State standouts have been strong players on the travel ball circuit, with Puryear proving the strength of his interior game with KC Run GMC and VanLeer earning a sharpshooter’s reputation with St. Louis Gateway. VanLeer shot 35 percent from three-point range for the club over the summer.

Puryear is excited to get started at Mizzou in the Fall of 2015, relishing the opportunity to bring his intensity and tenacity to the Mizzou Arena court.

“I’m extremely excited about the opportunity to be a part of my dream school,” Puryear said. “I’m just very happy to be in the Mizzou family.”

VanLeer, focused on contributing to the Tigers’ squad immediately, echoed his signing class partner’s feelings about putting on the Black & Gold uniform.

“I’m really excited to be joining the Mizzou Basketball family,” VanLeer said. “Being a Missouri kid, I take great pride in being able to play for and attend the University of Missouri.”

— MU Sports Information —

Griffon women nearly upset Mizzou in exhibition game 78-75

MWSUThe Missouri Western women’s basketball team lost an exhibition game against Missouri Tuesday night inside Mizzou Arena, 78-75.

Missouri led by as many as 18 in the second half before MWSU closed the gap with a chance to tie at the buzzer. LaQuinta Jefferson missed a three that would have sent the game into overtime and handed the Mizzou women their second straight close win against an MIAA opponent. Last week, the Tigers downed Lindenwood by six.

The Griffons and Tigers stayed even throughout the first part of the first half but the Tigers eventually pulled away shooting 44% and forcing the Griffons into 17 team fouls. Missouri led at the break 41-25. In the second half, the Griffons were able to close the gap hitting four three-pointers and converting on 13-17 free throws in the half.

LaQuinta Jefferson scored 40 points in the game and collected five rebounds. Sarafina Handy added 10 points for the Griffons and Ariana Novak had eight points.

Missouri Western begins its regular season at Quincy, Illinois for the Quincy Classic as they take on Robert Morris College on Friday at 5:00 p.m. and Quincy Saturday at 4:00 p.m.

The game against Robert Morris can be heard on 680 KFEQ and the Griffon Sports Network.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Western volleyball wins at Lindenwood Tuesday 3-1

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western volleyball team got off to a slow start but rallied for a 3-1 win at Lindenwood Tuesday night. The Griffons improve to 22-7 this season and 16-5 in the MIAA.

After dropping set one, 26-24, Missouri Western won the next three sets: 25-17, 25-18 and 25-20. Erica Rottinghaus led the way for the Grifon offense with 13 kills and helped out on the other end with 19 digs. Jessie Thorup added 10 kills and Jordan Chohon finished with 36 assists and hit .444 with four kills. Sarah Faubel padded her school digs record with 20.

Missouri Western will wrap up the regular season Friday night when they travel to Central Missouri.  The match begins at 7:00 p.m.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Kansas rolls to exhibition win against Emporia State

KUThe Kansas defense was relentless in the opening half, allowing just seven Emporia State baskets, yet the Jayhawk offense needed time to catch up. The wait was worth it as KU ignited for 63 points in the final 20 minutes en route to an overwhelming 109-56 exhibition win at Allen Fieldhouse Tuesday night.

Despite a 21-point halftime advantage, Kansas came out of the break ready to change the lackluster offensive tempo. Sophomore guard Frank Mason III pulled the trigger on an alley-oop pass to sophomore guard Wayne Selden, Jr., for a dunk just 13 seconds into the half. Moments later, Selden was in on a trap at half court that forced the Hornets into an over-and-back turnover.

Just like that, the tempo was changed.

Freshman forward Cliff Alexander, who scored just four points in the opening frame, unleashed for three second-half dunks to light up the sold-out building. At halftime, five other Jayhawks had more points than the incoming Naismith High School Player of the Year. By night’s end, however, Alexander was the first Jayhawk to double-figures and finished with 12 points.

He wasn’t alone. Kansas was fair in the first half, scoring 46 points on 50 percent shooting, but went berserk in the next 20 minutes – hitting 66 percent from the floor (23-for-35). KU doubled its first-half scoring total in less than 14 minutes, while eight of its 15 players finished the game in double-figures. What resulted was the Jayhawks’ highest-scoring exhibition effort in 10 years (115-70 vs. Emporia State, 11/7/04).

Like Alexander, junior forward Perry Ellis was also slow to score in the first half, tallying only two points. He let loose for 11 points in 11 minutes in the final frame to tie for the team lead with 13 points. Fellow big man, sophomore Landen Lucas, missed just one from the floor (4-for-5) and once from the free throw line (5-for-6) to tie Ellis with a team-high 13 points.

Selden finished behind them with 12 points, all of which came in the second half. Redshirt junior forward Hunter Mickelson chalked up 11 points before becoming KU’s only foul-out victim and sophomore guard Frank Mason III hung up 11 points, as well. Guards Brannen Greene and Devonte’ Graham sparked an impressive 61 points off the bench with their 10 points apiece. Junior forward Jamari Traylor just missed the 10-point mark as his perfect 4-for-4 shooting left him with nine points.

Freshman guard Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk made his first start, albeit unofficial, marking the only change in the starting lineup from the Jayhawks’ first exhibition. The other changes, however, were more significant. Most notably, was the Jayhawks’ much improved free-throw accuracy as well as their rebound (45-29) and assist (26-6) margins.

By the end of the first half, the pesky Kansas defense held Emporia State to 7-of-26 shooting in the first half and a lowly 29 percent (15-for-51) for the game. Sophomore guard Jay Temaat actually led the floor with his 16 points, but he was the only Hornet in double-figures.

Three offensive rebounds in their first possession provided multiple opportunities for the Hornets to score the first points the night. ESU sophomore forward Terrence Sardin obliged with a put-back layup, while his team kept the Jayhawks off the board for nearly two-and-a-half minutes. In fact, neither team caught much fire early on. In the first 10 attempts on both sides, ESU made just two buckets, KU only four. The Jayhawks righted the ship, making 12 of their next 22 to finish the half at 50 percent shooting, thanks in large part to the input off the bench.

When Greene and Graham checked in and delivered a quick five-point burst, KU saw its first double-digit lead, but it wasn’t a lasting one until Hunter Mickelson found Kelly Oubre, Jr. sprinting toward the basket. The open look resulted in an easy two points for Oubre and a 20-8 lead midway through the first half. Emporia State would never get within single digits again.

Though Kansas built a lead that remained intact, it was slow to grow as more than two minutes passed with the same 20-8 score on the board. Adding to it, 10 minutes still remained in the first half when Emporia State was whistled for its seventh team foul to drag the opening frame out with bonus free throws. Kansas certainly converted – hitting 13-of-14 from the line – but the excitement was lacking.

Right on cue, Alexander slammed a Mickelson pass through the basket. Oubre swatted a shot into the hands of Graham, who laid it in on the other end and suddenly the Jayhawks broke open the game. Waiting it out, Graham let the final seconds tick away before driving the lane for the last bucket of the half and Kansas took a 46-25 lead to the lockerroom.

Head coach Bill Self and company flipped the switch during the break and came back out aggressive and ready to score. Not three minutes into the second half, Kansas shot out to a 30-point lead. The offense finally in gear, Greene knocked down and three, while Selden found Ellis for another lob-to-dunk pass. Meanwhile the Jayhawks were still money from the free throw line when Ellis connected on two more, putting KU up big, 60-28.

Mykhailiuk shot and missed four threes in the first half. Fittingly, he landed his first one of the night during the Jayhawks’ second-half fireworks show. Although it was the only ‘Svi for Three’ of the night, his trey doubled up the score, 84-42.

It was flat-out fun after that, watching eight different Jayhawks shoot their way to double-digits. All 15 Jayhawks saw time in the landslide, including junior guard Evan Manning who’s three-pointer put the finishing touches on KU’s 109-56 win.

UP NEXT
Kansas will open the regular season on Friday, Nov. 14 against UC Santa Barbara at 7 p.m.

— KU Sports Information —

Chiefs rally, hold off Buffalo for fourth straight vicotry

riggertChiefsORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) — Alex Smith and the Kansas City Chiefs didn’t flinch in the face of adversity.

For Leodis McKelvin and the Buffalo Bills, they endured a familiar late-game meltdown for a franchise that has had little go its way during a 14-season playoff drought — the NFL’s longest active streak.

Smith, on an 8-yard run, and Jamaal Charles, on a 39-yard scamper on fourth-and-1, scored less than five minutes apart as the Chiefs overcame a 10-point fourth-quarter deficit to pull out a 17-13 win over the bumbling Bills on Sunday.

“I think there is something to winning these types of games,” Smith said. “There’s a different type of confidence you get when you win games like this.”

The Chiefs (6-3) came out on top in a key midseason AFC showdown by improving to 6-1 in their past seven games.

It was a different mood altogether in Buffalo’s locker room after the Bills (5-4) unraveled coming out of their bye week. McKelvin had difficulty containing his anger in issuing a series of profanity-laced answers in discussing how his fumble helped cost Buffalo the game.

“I take this … to heart,” McKelvin said. “I fumbled the ball. It hurt us. But we still had a chance to come back and win the game. (Stuff) happens in the game. But you’ve still got to overcome it.”

The outcome turned early in the fourth quarter with Buffalo clinging to a 13-10 lead.

The Bills’ defense forced a three-and-out, forcing the Chiefs to punt out of their own end zone.

McKelvin fielded Dustin Colquitt’s punt cleanly at his own 31 and took a few steps to his right. That’s when he was hit by Albert Wilson. Anthony Sherman then knocked the ball loose and recovered the fumble at the Bills’ 26.

Two plays later, Smith faked a handoff to the right to Charles and then took off left for the go-ahead score with nearly nine minutes left.

“There’s going to be games like this where everything is not pretty and you have to play through it, and there’s a certain toughness that it takes,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “And our guys showed that today.”

The Chiefs’ defense showed that in ending any chances of Buffalo manufacturing a comeback after McKelvin’s 23-yard punt return gave the Bills the ball at Kansas City’s 25 with 4:35 remaining.

The drive stalled at the 15, when Kyle Orton threw four consecutive incompletions, including an underthrown attempt to Sammy Watkins at the 1 on fourth down. Defensive back Ron Parker knocked down three Orton attempts, while another sailed through the end zone past Chris Hogan.

Orton went 29-of-48 for 259 yards, including a 25-yard touchdown to Hogan. Marcell Dareus had three of Buffalo’s six sacks.

Very little went right for the Bills’ offense after Orton hit Hogan for a 25-yard touchdown to cap the opening drive. Buffalo then managed two field goals, lost a fumble and turned the ball over on downs in four trips inside the Chiefs’ 20.

The lost fumble was crucial in opening the second half. Running back Bryce Brown was three steps from the end zone when he had the ball punched out of his hands by Parker. The ball bounced into the end zone, where tight end Scott Chandler had it go off his fingers and out for a touchback.

“It’s disappointing, it’s frustrating, all those words,” Chandler said. “I don’t know what to say about it. We’ve got to be better.”

Things don’t get any easier for the Bills, who had a two-game win streak snapped and fell to 2-4 against conference rivals. They face a key test in a short week — at division rival Miami on Thursday night.

This marked the fourth time during their playoff drought the Bills lost after compiling a 5-3 record. Buffalo hasn’t had six or more wins through nine games since 1999, the last time it made the playoffs.

The Chiefs, who opened last season at 9-0, find themselves on another roll and in the thick of a jumbled AFC playoff race.

“It’s just crazy how the NFL is going this year,” offensive tackle Eric Fisher said. “It was a huge AFC game for us. Getting that win, being 6-3, that sounds pretty good.”

Charles finished with 98 yards rushing, Smith went 17-of-29 for 177 yards and Dwayne Bowe had eight catches for 93 years.

Game notes

Chiefs RB Cyrus Gray sustained a torn knee ligament. Reid said TE Demetrius Harris broke his foot before the game. … Bills WR Marquise Goodwin did not return after hurting his ribs in the fourth quarter. … Bills RB Fred Jackson was limited to 10 yards rushing and 39 yards receiving in his first game after hurting his groin three week ago.

— Associated Press —

Griffons bounce back and dominate Nebraska-Kearney 55-0

MWSUA week after suffering their worst loss in four years, the Missouri Western football team had its largest margin of victory in over a year with a 55-0 win over Nebraska-Kearney.

It’s the biggest win for Missouri Western since a 60-point victory over Missouri S&T on Sept. 14, 2013 at Spratt Stadium and the Griffon defense’s second shutout of the year.

Western had a season high 550 yards of offense, including 217 on the ground and 333 through the air. The offense showed a new wrinkle, using tight end Daylon Harper as a fullback. The sophomore rushed seven carries for 24 yards and the only two rushing touchdowns of his career.

The win moves MWSU to 6-4 on the season and guarantees a sixth straight winning season and 12th consecutive winning record in the MIAA. Prior to the game, 12 Griffon seniors were honored for their contributions to the program. One of those seniors, linebacker Stephen Juergens, led the team with eight total tackles. The Griffon defense racked up seven sacks, including 2.5 from Cody Lindsay. Missouri Western also forced two Loper fumbles and Marc Harrison picked up his third interception of the year. Nebraska-Kearney was limited to 229 yards of offense and only 92 on the ground, nearly 100 less than their season average coming into the game.

Skyler Windmiller finished 16-23 with 296 yards passing, two touchdowns and two interceptions. Raphael Spencer rushed 17 times for 72 yards and Dominic Thomas, another Griffon senior, finished with seven carries for 56 yards and a 32-yard TD run. Dee Tolliver had two catches for 133 yards receiving and two touchdowns. Brandynn Clark finished with seven catches for 55 yards.

It’s the sixth straight win for the Griffons over Nebraska-Kearney. The Lopers still lead the all-time series 16-9. Griffon head coach Jerry Partridge is now 6-0 against UNK and Loper head coach Darrell Morris moves to 0-3 against MWSU.

Missouri Western will look to win their seventh game of the season next week when they travel to Missouri Southern for a 1:00 p.m. kickoff.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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