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Griffons get dominated by Northwest Missouri State 40-3

MWSUThe Missouri Western football team suffered its worst loss since 2010, falling 40-3 to No. 8 Northwest Missouri State on Saturday afternoon in Maryville.

The 37 point defeat was the worst since Missouri Western was shutout 42-0 in Maryville in 2010. The Griffons tallied just six first downs and 78 yards of offense. With the loss, Missouri Western drops to 5-4 on the season. It’s the first time MWSU has lost four games in a season since 2010 and the first 4-loss season in the MIAA since 2008.

The Griffon defense did hold down the Northwest passing game, allowing just 99 yards through the air and picking off two Northwest passes. The Bearcats did their damage on the ground, rushing for 397 yards on 67 carries.

Stephen Juergens finished with 17 total tackles. Meshack Kennedy had 14 and Kirk Resseguie had 10. Skyler Windmiller was 9-19 for 33 yards passing with one interception and Raphael Spencer carried 12 times for 29 yards. John Schmiemeier gave the Griffons their only points of the game with a 48 yard field goal in the second quarter.

Missouri Western will honor the 2014 senior class next Saturday when they host Nebraska-Kearney at 1:30 p.m.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri beats Kentucky for third straight win

riggertMizzouCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Maty Mauk completed 18 of 33 passes for 164 yards and two touchdowns — both to Bud Sasser — to lead Missouri past Kentucky in a 20-10 win Saturday.

Mauk added another 75 yards on the ground, picking up four first downs, and completed 10 consecutive passes in the first half, including a 26-yard toss to a streaking Sasser in the end zone over defender J.D. Harmon.

Sasser also hauled in a 3-yard toss for a TD and finished with six catches for 67 yards. Andrew Baggett kicked 41- and 21-yard field goals.

Coupled with Georgia’s 38-20 loss to Florida, the Tigers (7-2, 4-1) now lead the Southeastern Conference Eastern Division by a half-game.

Missouri’s offensive struggles reappeared at times as the Tigers gained 320 yards, but the defense limited Kentucky to 258 yards and 2-for-16 on third-down conversions.

Patrick Towles gained 158 yards through the air for Kentucky (5-4, 2-4), a week after throwing for a career-high 390 yards against Mississippi State.

Kentucky struggled to achieve much consistency on offense itself, starting 0-for-8 on third-down conversions. Towles threw for 1 yard and an interception in the first half before leading an 80-yard touchdown drive to narrow his team’s deficit to 20-10 with 3:26 remaining.

The Wildcats then recovered the ensuring onside kick, but Missouri’s Matt Hoch and Michael Scherer stopped Towles for a 2-yard loss on 4th-and-1 at the Tigers’ 21-yard line.

After a 3-and-out by Missouri, Kentucky had another chance but Shane Ray sacked Towles on 4th down, his second sack of the game and his 12th of the season, breaking the previous school record of 11.5 set by Aldon Smith and Michael Sam.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western volleyball gets swept at Pittsburg State

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western volleyball team lost three close sets at Pittsburg State Saturday afternoon for just their sixth loss of the season and fourth MIAA loss.

It was the second time this season MWSU has been swept and the first time since the Griffons dropped three straight sets to Central Missouri on Sept. 16.  Western falls to 20-6 and 14-4 in the MIAA.

The Gorillas took the first set, 25-21 in what proved to be the largest margin of victory for any set Pittsburg State won. The next two sets were won by just two points each. Erica Rottinghaus led the Griffons with 18 kills on 34 total attacks. The Griffons hit .176 as a team and had three players finish with negative hitting percentages. Jordan Chohon finished the match with 40 assists and Sarah Faubel had 15 digs. Pittsburg State held Jessie Thorup to just seven kills and kept Amanda Boender (6) and Kelsey Olion (9) in the single digits. Missouri Western had 22 attack errors to 13 for the Gorillas.

Missouri Western returns to the MWSU Fieldhouse on Friday night when they host Fort Hays State at 7 p.m.  On Saturday, four Griffon seniors will be honored in their final home match against Nebraska-Kearney.

— MWSU Sports Information —

No. 15 Nebraska defeats Purdue; Abdullah Leaves Game

NebraskaLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — With Ameer Abdullah out most of the game with a knee injury, Nebraska slogged through a win over Purdue and now has two weeks to get their Heisman Trophy hopeful healed for the No. 15 Cornhuskers’ showdown with Wisconsin.

Imani Cross, Abdullah’s backup, ran for two short touchdowns in a 35-14 victory Saturday that moved Nebraska (No. 15 CFP, No. 17 AP) into sole possession of first place in the Big Ten West.

The Huskers (8-1, 4-1) are a half-game ahead of Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin after their third straight win. The question now is whether Abdullah will be able to play against the Badgers in what could be the game of the year in the West.

“We’re very optimistic,” coach Bo Pelini said.

Cornerback Josh Mitchell, who had two of Nebraska’s three sacks, said he spoke with Abdullah after the game and is confident the Husker’ star will be ready.

“He’s going to be all right,” Mitchell said. “He’s a warrior. He wanted to be out there and play if he could. He’s tough. He’ll be back.”

Abdullah, who came into the game third nationally in rushing at 156 yards a game, mildly sprained and bruised his left knee on the Huskers’ second possession while recovering Tommy Armstrong Jr.’s fumbled snap at the Purdue 1-yard line. Abdullah returned to carry one more time, losing 5 yards, and didn’t return.

The senior has run for at least 200 yards in a nation-leading four games and has 1,250 for the season.

With Abdullah out, Nebraska continued to pound away with the run as winds gusting to 30 mph made it tough to pass. Cross carried 20 times for 66 yards and Terrell Newby added ran nine times for 42.

The Huskers had a season-low 297 total yards after playing much of the game on a short field. Their average starting field position was their own 49.

“I thought our defense played great, they really did,” Purdue coach Darrell Hazell said. “They were put in some bad situations.”

In addition to his fumble, Armstrong threw two interceptions and was just 8 of 21 for 118 yards. He did run for 70 yards, including a 29-yard TD.

“I’m embarrassed,” Armstrong said. “The way we played, we should have lost. I feel like I failed. We got a win, but we play a team like Wisconsin or Iowa, it’s not going to be pretty.”

Purdue (3-6, 1-4) converted only 2 of 16 third downs, but stayed in the game into the fourth quarter.

Austin Appleby hit Cameron Posey for a 23-yard touchdown to cut the lead to 28-14, and the Boilers were set up in Nebraska territory again when Landon Feichter intercepted his second pass of the game. But Purdue turned the ball over on downs.

Nebraska tacked on a touchdown on Newby’s 7-yard run after Purdue failed to convert on fourth down for the fourth of five times in the second half.

The Boilers had scored 31 or more points in three straight games with Appleby as the starting quarterback. But, he was 18 of 46 for 216 yards as he struggled with a defense that sacked him three times and had nine hurries.

The Huskers started their first three drives at the Purdue 17, 16 and 31, but came away with only seven points.

“Collective ugliness,” Nebraska offensive coordinator Tim Beck said, referring to his charges.

Two plays after Kieron Williams blocked Thomas Meadows’ punt, Armstrong threw a 17-yard pass to De’Mornay Pierson-El.

Pierson-El ran back Meadows’ next punt 42 yards, and the Huskers had first-and-goal at the Purdue 4 but couldn’t punch it in. Armstrong fumbled the snap on fourth down at the 1, with Abdullah getting hurt in the scrum for the ball.

The Huskers were held scoreless after getting another short field when Drew Brown pushed his 46-yard field-goal try wide right for his third straight miss.

Appleby broke a 25-yard run to pull Purdue into a 7-all tie early in the second quarter. Nebraska responded with a 65-yard march that Cross finished with a 2-yard run.

Brandon Reilly partially blocked Meadows’ next punt to set up the Huskers at midfield, and Armstrong went 29-yards to put the Huskers up 21-7. Cross scored from the 1 to make it a three-touchdown game in the third quarter.

“We’re right there,” Appleby said. “Defense plays good and the offense comes up short. Offense plays good, defense comes up short. We’ve got to play together.”

— Associated Press —

Kansas gets hammered by No. 13 Baylor

riggertKUWACO, Texas (AP) — Bryce Petty had three touchdown passes, including two to Corey Coleman, and No. 13 Baylor scored on 11 straight possessions despite looking sluggish at times in a 60-14 victory over Kansas on Saturday.

Baylor (7-1, 3-1 Big 12) had to settle for field goals after two of three first-half fumbles by the Jayhawks deep in their territory, but the Bears (No. 13 CFP, No. 12 AP) still rolled up 669 yards in their 14th straight home victory in the 91st homecoming game. That streak ties Auburn for the longest in the nation.

Coleman had a career-high 167 yards receiving and TDs of 72 and 49 yards, the latter putting the Bears up 46-7 early in the third quarter.

Kansas (2-6, 0-5) had 0 yards rushing at halftime in its 31st straight loss away from home and 28th in a row in a true road game since winning at UTEP in 2009.

The Bears had to wait two weeks for their bounce-back win after their undefeated season ended at West Virginia. During the lull, Baylor also found out it will have an uphill climb in the playoff rankings after debuting at No. 13 in the race for the first four-team postseason tournament.

Petty said he didn’t like sitting on that loss for two weeks, but his offense didn’t show much urgency early in what turned into Baylor’s fourth game with at least 60 points this season.

After a three-and-out to start the game, the Bears got the ball inside the Kansas 25 after fumbles on consecutive possession in the second quarter but didn’t get a first down either time.

After the second fumble, by Kansas quarterback Michael Cummings when he was sacked by K.J. Smith, Baylor had to call a timeout before the first snap. It didn’t help.

The beneficiary was Chris Callahan, who kicked four field goals to match his season high from a wild 61-58 win over TCU.

Petty secured his 20th straight game with at least one touchdown pass on the game’s first score, throwing short to Coleman, who ran free down the sideline on the 72-yarder after Cassius Sendish slipped when closing in for the tackle.

Petty was 15 of 27 for 277 yards before going to the sideline for good late in the third quarter.

Devin Chafin had a career-high 112 yards rushing and two touchdowns, and Big 12 rushing leader Shock Linwood finished with 81 yards and a leaping score from the 1.

The Jayhawks had two players — cornerback Derrick Neal and defensive lineman Keon Stowers — taken to a hospital after getting injured in the first half.

Stowers had his head immobilized on a stretcher after a play in the second quarter. He flashed a thumbs-up sign as the cart took him off the field, and a Kansas athletic spokesman said he was able to move his extremities.

Neal’s head collided with the knee of Chafin when he was covering a kickoff in the first quarter. Neal was placed in a neck brace before walking to the cart.

Kansas fell to 0-4 under interim coach Clint Bowen, who announced before the game that receivers coach Eric Kiesau was taking the play-calling role from offensive coordinator John Reagan.

Charlie Weis, who was fired as coach Sept. 28 after a loss to Texas, hired Reagan in the offseason after handling those duties himself his first two seasons.

Cummings threw for 288 yards and two touchdowns, both to Nick Harwell, who had 79 yards receiving.

— Associated Press —

Area High School Football District Scores – Friday, October 31

riggertFootballMSHSAA DISTRICT SEMIFINALS

Class 4 District 8
1 Kearney 17, 5 Lafayette 6
3 Smithville 44, 2 Platte County 38

Class 3 District 8
1 Maryville 50, 5 Chillicothe 28
2 St. Pius X 35, 3 Lincoln Prep 13

Class 2 District 8
1 Brookfield 44, 4 Lawson 14
2 East Buchanan 58, 3 Bishop LeBlond 34

Class 1 District 7
1 Plattsburg 42, 5 Lone Jack 6
2 West Platte 67, 3 Wellington-Napoleon 24

Class 1 District 8
1 Polo 47, 4 Gallatin 26
2 Hamilton 53, 3 Maysville 14

8-Man District 1
1 Rock Port 16, 4 East Atchison 12
2 North West Nodaway 84, 3 Worth County 66

8-Man District 2
1 Stanberry 60, 5 Mound City 8
2 Albany 84, 3 South Nodaway 42

8-Man District 3
1 North Andrew 46, 5 DeKalb 0
2 St. Joseph Christian 48, 3 Stewartsville 26

8-Man District 4
1 Southwest Livingston 62, 4 Northwest Hughesville 24
2 Norborne 62, 3 Hardin-Central 24

MWSU vollleyball defeat Southwest Baptist 3-1 for win No. 20

riggertMissouriWesternIf there was any doubt the 2014 Missouri Western volleyball team is one of the best in school history, the team now has the numbers to back it up after a 3-1 victory at Southwest Baptist Friday night.

The Griffons are now 20-5 overall and 14-3 in the MIAA. It’s the first time since 2004 the Griffons have won 20 matches and they’ve matched the program’s most ever wins in the MIAA.

SBU dominated the first set, 25-14 but MWSU took the next three: 25-14, 25-19 and 25-19 to climb into the ranks of MWSU’s top teams ever.

Jessie Thorup led the attack with 14 kills, followed by eight apiece from Kelsey Olion and Erica Rottinghaus. Olion also led the team with 16 digs. Sarah Faubel had 13 digs and Jordan Chohon added 47 assists.

The Griffons take on Pittsburg State at 3:00 p.m. Saturday inside John Lance Arena in Pittsburg, KS.

— MWSU Sports Information–

Griffon soccer drops home finale to Northwest Missouri State

MWSUThe Missouri Western women’s soccer team lost 1-0 to Northwest Missouri State on a chilly, Senior Night at Spratt Stadium Friday.

Danielle Wolfe’s header off a free kick in the 88th minute was the game winner for Northwest, who moved to 7-9-1 and 4-8-1 in the MIAA with the win. The Griffons fall to 9-7-1 and 6-6-1 and conclude their regular season Sunday at No. 9 Central Missouri.

Missouri Western outshot the Bearcats 14-5, including seven shots on goal but couldn’t get any past Ashley Malloy. Sydney Cluck led the Griffons with three shots. Katie Kempf, Sydney Andrews and K.C. Ramsell each had two shots. Sarah Lyle ended the game with one save.

At halftime, Griffon seniors K.C. Ramsell, Tara Russell, A.J. Powers and Teddi Serna were honored. Serna was also given an honorary start after her season ended due to injury two weeks ago. The four seniors have helped the Griffons re-write the record books this season, winning more games and shutting out more opponents than any other Griffon Soccer team.

— MWSU Sports Information–

Royals come up short in Game 7 as Giants win World Series

WorldSeriesKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Madison Bumgarner and the San Francisco Giants succeeded where no team had in 3½ decades, winning Game 7 on the road for their third World Series title in five years.

Punctuating one of the finest October performances in baseball history, Bumgarner came out of the bullpen to pitch five scoreless innings on two days’ rest, and the Giants held off the Kansas City Royals 3-2 Wednesday night in a championship pushed to the limit.

A two-out misplay in the ninth almost wrecked it for Bumgarner and the Giants. He had retired 14 in a row when Alex Gordon’s single fell in front of center fielder Gregor Blanco, who let the ball get past him for an error that allowed Gordon to reach third.

Bumgarner, however, retired Salvador Perez on a foulout to third baseman Pedro Sandoval. The big left-hander was immediately embraced by catcher Buster Posey, and the rest of the Giants rushed to the mound to join the victory party. Most of the San Francisco players tossed their gloves high in the air as they ran to the center of the diamond.

Three days after throwing 117 pitches in a four-hit shutout to win Game 5, Bumgarner threw 68 more and dropped his record-low career Series ERA to a barely visible 0.25.

Michael Morse hit a go-ahead single in the fourth that stood up, and the Giants eked out a battle of the bullpens on a night when both starting pitchers made unusually quick exits.

The Giants were dubbed a “Band of Misfits” in 2010 when they beat Texas to win the franchise’s first title since 1954 in New York. Two years later, they swept Detroit for another championship.

And this time, they became the second NL team with three titles in a five-year span, matching Stan Musial’s St. Louis Cardinals of 1942-46.

Every other year. It’s the closest thing to a dynasty baseball has seen in the 21st century.

Home teams had won nine straight Game 7s in the Series since Pittsburgh’s victory at Baltimore in 1979, including the Royals’ 11-0 rout of St. Louis in 1985. Teams hosting the first two games had won 23 of the last 28 titles, including five in a row. And the Giants had lost all four of their previous World Series pushed to the limit.

But before a pumped-up, blue-and-white-clad crowd of 40,535 that hoped noise and passion could lift the small-market Royals to a title that seemed improbable when Kansas City was languishing two games under .500 in mid-July, the Giants won the second all-wild card World Series, 12 years after losing Game 7 to the Angels in the first.

Both managers promised quick hooks if their starters showed the slightest signs of faltering, and both managers delivered as Tim Hudson and Jeremy Guthrie combined for 15 outs — matching the fewest by Game 7 starters. Hudson, at 39 the oldest Game 7 starter, allowed two runs in 1 2-3 innings. The 35-year-old Guthrie took the loss, giving up three runs in 3 1-3 innings

Jeremy Affeldt followed Hudson with 2 1/3 innings of scoreless relief in his longest outing since July 2012, getting help from the first successful replay challenge in World Series history.

With his shaggy hair making him look every bit a gunslinger, Bumgarner entered to boos in the bottom of the fifth, coated his long arms with rosin and groomed the pocked-up mound with his spikes.

He gave up an opposite-field single to his first batter, Omar Infante, who advanced on a sacrifice. Bumgarner retired Nori Aoki on a liner near the left-field line that was grabbed by Juan Perez, starting over Travis Ishikawa because of his defense. Bumgarner then struck out Lorenzo Cain.

He retired the side in order in the sixth, seven and eighth, increasing his pitch count to 52. With loud chants of “Let’s Go Royals!” echoing through Kauffman Stadium, he struck out Eric Hosmer to open the ninth, then retired Billy Butler on a foulout to bring up Gordon.

The 25-year-old Bumgarner allowed two hits, struck out four and walked none. He pitched 52 2/3 postseason innings, 4 1/3 more than the previous mark set by Arizona’s Curt Schilling in 2001, and finished with 270 innings combined, including the regular season.

Voted the Series MVP, MadBum became king of SoMa, and from Nob Hill to North Beach, from The Marina to The Mission, San Francisco celebrated another title won by Kung Fu Panda and Hunter Pence.

Pence batted .444 in the Series and Sandoval, a free-agent-to-be playing perhaps his last game for the Giants, finished at .429 following a three-hit night. In an era when pitching and computer-aided defense has supplanted steroids-saturated sluggers, baseball’s dominant team established itself in the tech-fueled, boomtown by the Bay.

The Giants, a 20-1 longshot when 2014 odds were first posted a year ago, won their eighth title and third since moving from New York to San Francisco after the 1957 season. They also have won 10 straight postseason rounds, one shy of the record set by the New York Yankees from 1998-01.

After finishing tied with Pittsburgh in the wild-card race at 88-74, the Giants advanced when Bumgarner pitched a four-hit shutout and then beat Washington and St. Louis in the NL playoffs.

Bruce Bochy became the 10th manager to win three World Series titles — the other nine are all in the Hall of Fame.

Sandoval was hit just above the right elbow leading off the second, Pence reached out and pulled an 0-2 changeup into left for a single and Brandon Belt poked a single into right, loading the bases.

Consecutive sacrifice flies by Morse and Brandon Crawford put the Giants ahead 2-0.

But Hudson gave the lead right back and was chased after 28 pitches, walking off the mound with a stunned look when Bochy removed him after just four outs — the shortest Game 7 start since the Yankees’ Bob Turley was pulled after a leadoff single in the second in 1960.

Kansas City pressured Hudson in a three-pitch span when Billy Butler singled leading off, Gordon lined the next pitch to right-center for an RBI double and Perez was hit by a pitch.

Gordon scored on Infante’s sacrifice fly for a 2-all tie.

THE CORE

Eight players have been on all three Series rosters for the Giants in the past five years: Affeldt, Bumgarner, Santiago Casilla, Tim Lincecum, Javier Lopez, Posey, Sergio Romo and Sandoval. Matt Cain, a member of the first two title teams, was hurt this October. Before this run, manager John McGraw (1905, `21-22) was the only Giant with three titles.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western volleyball ranked No. 8 in first Central Region poll

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western volleyball team sits in eighth in the first edition of the 2014 Central Region poll. The top-8 teams will make the NCAA Regional Tournament.

Missouri Western is on a record breaking pace, winning its most MIAA contests since 1995 and most overall victories since the 2000 season. The Griffons 18 wins against regional opponents rank third in the region.

Three of Missouri Westenr’s five losses this season have come to opponents currently ranked above them in the regional rankings: Central Missouri (4), Nebraska-Kearney (6) and Augustana (7).

While the top-8 teams make the regional tournament, no Great American Conference team is currently ranked in the top-10, but the conference champion will receive an automatic bid. Should the GAC champion not be ranked in the top-8, they would bump a ranked team out of the tournament.

Missouri Western will have chances to improve its regional ranking with a home match against sixth ranked Nebraska-Kearney on Nov. 8 and a chance for redemption on the road at Central Missouri on Nov. 14 in the team’s final regular season contest.

The Griffons will look to match the most MIAA wins in school history (14) on Friday when they travel to Southwest Baptist.

Regional Record    Overall Record
1    Minnesota Duluth    19-0    22-1
2    Concordia-St. Paul    15-2    20-3
3    Southwest Minnesota State    12-5    16-7
4    Central Missouri    15-3    15-8
5    Wayne State (NE)    18-4    20-4
6    Nebraska- Kearney    21-2    21-2
7    Augustana (SD)    14-8    15-8
8    Missouri Western State    18-5    18-5
9    Washburn    18-4    18-4
10    Winona State    14-5    15-6

— MWSU Sports Information —

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