We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

KU picked fifth in preseason AP Top 25 basketball poll

riggertKUKansas men’s basketball is preseason ranked No. 5 by the Associated Press (AP), which released its first poll of the 2013-14 season Thursday.

This marks the second-straight year, and the fourth time in the last five seasons, that the Jayhawks have entered the season No. 7 or higher by AP. Last year the Jayhawks were preseason No. 7, No. 1 in 2009-10 and No. 7 in 2010-11.

Historically, this is the eighth time in the 11-year Bill Self era that Kansas enters the season ranked seventh or higher in the Associated Press preseason poll and the No. 5 ranking marks the 16th time since the 1992-93 season that Kansas will enter the season seventh or higher.

Last season, KU entered the year No. 7 nationally in the Associated Press poll and ended at No. 3. The AP’s final poll is released prior to the NCAA Tournament. The Jayhawks were ranked in the top 10 in all but two AP polls during the 2012-13 season.

Kansas will play six regular-season games against teams ranked in the AP preseason poll: No. 4 Duke, No. 8 Oklahoma State (twice), No. 10 Florida and No. 25 Baylor (twice).

Kansas enters the season No. 6 in the preseason USA Today Coaches’ poll.

Kansas continues its exhibition play when it hosts Fort Hays State Tuesday, Nov. 5 at 7 p.m. in Allen Fieldhouse. The game can be seen on the Jayhawk Television Network or ESPN3 outside the state of Kansas. The Jayhawks’ regular-season opens against Louisiana at Monroe on Friday, Nov. 8, at 7 p.m. in Allen Fieldhouse.

2013-14 Associated Press Preseason Poll (Oct. 31)
1. Kentucky (27)     21-12     1,546     —
2. Michigan St. (22)     27-9     1,543     9
3. Louisville (14)     35-5     1,501     2
4. Duke (2)     30-6     1,435     6
5. KANSAS     31-6     1,357     3
6. Arizona     27-8     1,311     21
7. Michigan     31-8     1,120     11
8. Oklahoma St.     24-9     1,093     17
8. Syracuse     30-10     1,093     16
10. Florida     29-8     1,048     14
11. Ohio St.     29-8     1,036     7
12. North Carolina     25-11     954     —
13. Memphis     31-5     741     19
14. VCU     27-9     680     —
15. Gonzaga     32-3     538     1
16. Wichita St.     30-9     512     —
17. Marquette     26-9     510     15
18. UConn     20-10     448     —
19. Oregon     28-9     408     25
20. Wisconsin     23-12     338     18
21. Notre Dame     25-10     332     23
22. UCLA     25-10     244     24
23. New Mexico     29-6     213     10
24. Virginia     23-12     189     —
25. Baylor     23-14     180     —

— KU Sports Information —

Northwest’s Adam named NFF National Scholar-Athlete

NWMSUNorthwest Missouri State senior quarterback Trevor Adams was named a National Scholar-Athlete by the National Football Foundation (NFF), in a release by the organization on Thursday. Out of 171 semifinalist nationwide from all divisions of play, Adams was one of 16 student-athletes to be named as a Scholar-Athlete. He will receive an $18,000 postgraduate scholarship and is now a finalist for the William V. Campbell Trophy, which recognizes an individual as the absolute best scholar-athlete in the nation.

“I’ve had the pleasure of knowing Trevor for almost five years now and there is no individual more deserving of this award than him,” said head football coach Adam Dorrel. “He is a leader who Northwest fans can be proud of and someone the community can look up to. His contribution to Bearcat football has been immeasurable and I know that whatever he decides to do, he will be successful.”

The award nomination process takes into consideration a student-athlete’s success on the field and in the classroom. Community service and testimonials were also taken into consideration when naming the semifinalists and the award winners.

“Northwest is thrilled to have Trevor Adams represent us as a finalist for the prestigious William V. Campbell Trophy,” said former football coach and current Northwest Director of Athletics Mel Tjeerdsma. “ During his career at Northwest, he has been the epitome of a true student-athlete. Besides his on-field and academic accomplishments, the intangibles that he brings in leadership, character and faith make him the perfect candidate for this award.”

The NFF will hold its awards dinner in New York City at the historic Waldorf-Astoria Hotel on Tuesday, Dec. 10. The ceremony will include the newest members of the College Football Hall of Fame, the National Scholar-Athlete class and other major award winners. At that time, the NFF will award the William V. Campbell Trophy to one of the 16 Scholar-Athletes with the winner’s postgraduate scholarship being raised to $25,000. The Scholar-Athlete Award is in its 55th year of existence. Adams joins former Northwest linebacker John Edmonds (2003) as the only Bearcats to earn this award.

Adams, a team captain this season, has put together one of the best careers in Bearcat football history. Entering Saturday’s game against Washburn, Adams is ranked fourth in career touchdown passes (55), fifth in total offense (6,358), sixth in passing yardage (5,907), sixth in completion percentage (64.6) and eighth in total completions (437). His 73.5 completion percentage is the highest mark in NCAA Division II and he also ranks third nationally with a 189.8 pass efficiency rating.

Adams earned CoSIDA Academic All-America and All-District honors as a junior and has a 3.94 GPA in biology and psychology at Northwest. He will graduate this December and plans on attending chiropractic school in Texas.

— Northwest Sports Information —

Cardinals lose World Series to Red Sox in six games

CardsBOSTON (AP) — There hasn’t been a party like this in New England for nearly a century.

Turmoil to triumph. Worst to first.

MVP David Ortiz and the Boston Red Sox, baseball’s bearded wonders, capped their remarkable turnaround by beating the St. Louis Cardinals 6-1 in Game 6 on Wednesday night to win their third World Series championship in 10 seasons.

Shane Victorino, symbolic of these resilient Red Sox, returned from a stiff back and got Boston rolling with a three-run double off the Green Monster against rookie sensation Michael Wacha.

John Lackey became the first pitcher to start and win a Series clincher for two different teams, allowing one run over 6 2-3 innings 11 years after his Game 7 victory as an Angels rookie in 2002.

With fans roaring on every pitch and cameras flashing, Koji Uehara struck out Matt Carpenter for the final out. The Japanese pitcher jumped into the arms of catcher David Ross while Red Sox players rushed from the dugout and bullpen as the Boston theme “Dirty Water” played on the public-address system.

And the Red Sox didn’t have to fly the trophy home. For the first time since Babe Ruth’s team back in 1918, Boston won the title at Fenway Park. The 101-year-old ballpark, oldest in the majors, was packed with 38,447 singing, shouting fans anticipating a celebration 95 years in the making. There wasn’t the cowboy-up comeback charm of “The Idiots” from 2004, who swept St. Louis to end an 86-year title drought. There wasn’t that cool efficiency of the 2007 team that swept Colorado. This time, they were Boston Strong — playing for a city shaken by the marathon bombings in April.

After late-season slumps in 2010 and ’11, the embarrassing revelations of a chicken-and-beer clubhouse culture that contributed to the ouster of manager Terry Francona, and the daily tumult of Bobby Valentine’s one-year flop, these Red Sox grew on fans. Just like the long whiskers on the players’ faces, starting with Jonny Gomes’ scruffy spring training beard.

Across the Northeast, from Connecticut’s Housatonic River up to the Aroostook in Maine, Boston’s eighth championship will be remembered for all the beard-yanking bonding. Ortiz, the only player remaining from the 2004 champs, had a Ruthian World Series. He batted .688 (11-for-16) with two homers, six RBIs and eight walks — including four in the finale — for a .760 on-base percentage in 25 plate appearances. Even slumping Stephen Drew delivered a big hit in Game 6, sending Wacha’s first pitch of the fourth into the right-center bullpen.

By the time the inning was over, RBI singles by Mike Napoli and Victorino had made it 6-0, and the Red Sox were on their way.

The win capped an emotional season for the Red Sox, one heavy with the memory of the events that unfolded on Patriots Day, when three people were killed and more than 260 wounded in bombing attacks at the Boston Marathon. The Red Sox wore “Boston Strong” logos on their left sleeves and erected a large emblem on the Green Monster as a constant reminder. A “B Strong” logo was mowed into center-field grass at Fenway.

Among the players blamed for the indifferent culture at the end of the Francona years, Lackey took the mound two days shy of the second anniversary of his elbow surgery and got his first Series win since the 2002 clincher. He pitched shutout ball into the seventh, when Carlos Beltran’s RBI single ended the Cardinals’ slump with runners in scoring position at 0-for-14.

Junichi Tazawa came in with the bases loaded and retired Allen Craig on an inning-ending grounder to first. Brandon Workman followed in the eighth and Uehara finished. St. Louis had been seeking its second title in three seasons, but the Cardinals sputtered.

Symbolic of the team’s struggles, reliever Trevor Rosenthal tripped while throwing a pitch to Ortiz in the eighth, balking Dustin Pedroia to second.

Pedroia had brought back memories of Carlton Fisk’s 1975 Game 6-winning home run, sending a first-inning drive about 10 feet foul of the Green Monster foul pole — and waving his left arm once to try to urge the ball fair as he came out of the batter’s box.

Lackey escaped a two-on, none-out jam in the second when he retired Matt Adams and David Freese on flyouts and, after a wild pitch, struck out Jon Jay. Boston wasted a similar threat in the bottom half, then went ahead on the third. Jacoby Ellsbury singled leading off and went to second on Pedroia’s grounder. Ortiz was intentionally walked, Napoli struck out and Gomes was hit above the left elbow with a pitch, loading the bases.

Victorino, wearing red, white and blue spikes with an American flag motif, had been 0-for-10 in the Series and missed the previous two games with a bad back. Dropped from second to sixth in the batting order, he took two balls and a called strike, then turned on a 93 mph fastball and sent it high off the Green Monster, the 37-foot-high wall in left. Gomes slid home as Yadier Molina took Matt Holliday’s one-hop throw and applied the tag, then argued with plate umpire Jim Joyce. Victorino, pumped with emotion, went to third on the throw and pounded his chest with both fists three times.

After Drew’s homer, Lance Lynn relieved Wacha with two on, and RBI singles by Napoli and Victorino boosted Boston’s lead to 6-0. Wacha entered 4-0 with a 1.00 ERA in his postseason career but gave up six runs, five hits and four walks in 3 2-3 innings, the shortest start of the 22-year-old’s big league career.

Boston was a 30-1 underdog to win the World Series last winter but joined the 1991 Minnesota Twins as the only teams to win titles one season after finishing in last place. Now, the Red Sox will raise another championship flag before their home opener next season April 4 against Milwaukee.

The Red Sox had not played a Series Game 6 since that infamous night at New York’s Shea Stadium in 1986, when Bill Buckner allowed Mookie Wilson’s 10th-inning roller to get through his legs. And there had not been one at Fenway since Fisk’s 12th-inning home run off the foul pole atop the Green Monster. Following consecutive late-season skids, the Red Sox parted with Francona at the end of the 2011 season and reports emerged of players drinking beer and eating fried chicken in the clubhouse during games. Valentine took over as manager, injuries caused Boston to use a club-record 56 players, and the Red Sox skidded to a 69-93 record, their poorest since 1965.

John Farrell, Boston’s pitching coach from 2007-10, was hired after a pair of seasons as Toronto’s manager. A roster turnover began in August 2012 when Adrian Gonzalez, Josh Beckett, Carl Crawford and their big-money contracts were traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers in a deal that saved Boston just more than $261.66 million through 2018.

The Red Sox restocked during the offseason by signing seven major league free agents for contracts of three years or fewer at a total of $100.45 million: Victorino, Napoli, Gomes, Drew, Uehara, Ryan Dempster and Ross. After losing closers Joel Hanrahan and Andrew Bailey to injuries early in the season, the Red Sox remained relatively healthy: Seventeen players wound up on the DL, down from 27.

They finished 97-65 _ matching St. Louis for the best record in the major leagues _ and made the playoffs for the first time since 2009. They also became the first team since the 2005 Cardinals to navigate the season without losing more than three in a row. After falling behind 2-1 in the Series, the Red Sox ended with three straight wins.

— Associated Press —

MIAA & member institutions selected as national championship host finalists

riggertMIAAIt was released Wednesday by the NCAA that Kansas City, Mo. has been selected as a finalist to host the Division II Football and Men’s and Women’s Soccer Championships in what would be a joint venture from the MIAA and the Kansas City Sports Commission.

Should the MIAA receive the bids they would host the events at Sporting Park and Swope Park Soccer Village in Kansas City. The other finalists for football are Florence, Alabama and Bentonville, Arkansas. The other finalists in soccer are Louisville, Kentucky; Evans, Georgia; Orlando, Florida and Pensacola, Florida.

“I am excited and pleased that the bids the MIAA has submitted with our partners at the Kansas City Sports Commission to host the NCAA Division II Football and Soccer Championships has reached the finalist stage in the selection process,” said MIAA Commissioner Bob Boerigter.  “I am confident that if selected, these events in Kansas City (played at Sporting Park and Swope Park) will be a memorable one for student-athletes and fans of Division II football and soccer.”

Several MIAA Schools have also been named finalists to host NCAA Championship events. Lindenwood and the GLVC’s Maryville are one of three finalists to host the 2014 Fall Festival. Lindenwood is also a finalist for the Women’s National Collegiate Ice Hockey Championship. Missouri Southern is one of four sites chosen as finalists for the Men’s and Women’s Cross Country Championships. Pittsburg State has been chosen as a finalist to host the Indoor Track and Field Championships.

Central Oklahoma is one of three finalists to host the Softball Championships for both Division II and Division III. Nebraska-Kearney was named a finalist for both Volleyball and Wrestling. Central Missouri is one of six finalists for the Women’s National Collegiate Bowling Championship.

“I want to congratulate our member schools for being named a finalist to host an NCAA Championship,” said Boerigter. “MIAA institutions play at a national level and the NCAA has recognized that our schools know how to host quality, high caliber championship events.”

The NCAA will announce the host sites for the 2014-15 through 2017-18 National Championships on Dec. 11, 2013.

Click here to view all of the finalist.

— MIAA Press Release —

Missouri State picked to finish 4th in preseason MVC basketball poll

riggertMissouriStateWith a host of returning personnel and a talented cast of newcomers, the Missouri State Bears have been selected fourth in the Missouri Valley Conference preseason poll, the league announced today (Oct. 30) prior to its Media Day event.

Wichita State is a unanimous pick to win the league, as the Shockers collected all 40 first-place votes and 400 points from the conference head coaches, sports information directors and media. Indiana State (352), Northern Iowa (318), the Bears (258) and Bradley (244) round out the upper division, while Evansville (186), Illinois State (139), Southern Illinois (123), conference newcomer Loyola (95) and Drake (85) complete the predictions.

“We’re excited about the upcoming season. Having 14 healthy bodies has allowed us to have some competitive practices and created some good competition,” said third-year MSU head coach Paul Lusk. “Preseason polls are great for discussion. But ultimately you have to prove it on the floor, and that’s where the league will be decided.”

Wednesday’s announcement also included honors for Bears’ sophomore Marcus Marshall (G, St. Paul, Minn.) who was rewarded with a place on the MVC Preseason All-Conference squad.  The club’s top returning scorer (11.5 ppg) was the Valley Newcomer of the Year in 2012-13, making him just the second MSU player to receive that honor. As a rookie, Marshall led MSU in 3-pointers and, free throw percentage, earned a spot on the league’s exclusive All-Newcomer Team and broke the school’s freshman scoring mark with 368 points.

“Marcus continues to develop his game, and we look for him to have an outstanding season,” Lusk said.

Marshall is joined on the preseason all-league squad by the Valley’s Preseason Player of the Year Cleanthony Early of Wichita State, Walt Lemon, Jr., of Bradley, Jake Odum of Indiana State, Desmar Jackson of Southern Illinois, Seth Tuttle of UNI and Ron Baker of Wichita State.

During his first two seasons at Missouri State, Lusk’s teams have finished higher than predicted both years. In 2011-12, the Bears were picked sixth in the league and tied for third, while last season, Missouri State was tabbed eighth in the preseason poll but finished in a tie for seventh place.  The last time MSU was picked fourth was 2006-07, and the club’s most-recent prediction in the upper division was second in 2010-11 when Missouri State claimed its first-ever Valley regulars-season title.

The Bears will open the regular season a week from Friday (Nov. 8) at Old Dominion (6 p.m., Central) in a BracketBusters return game.

— MSU Sports Information —

Chiefs make three roster moves Wednesday

riggertChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Wednesday that the club has elevated offensive lineman Rokevious Watkins to the active 53-man roster and waived tight end Kevin Brock. Additionally, the team has signed tight end Dominique Jones to the club’s practice squad roster.

Watkins (6-3, 338) has served on the Chiefs practice squad since Sept. 1, 2013. He played in one contest his rookie season in 2012 with the St. Louis Rams. He originally entered the NFL as a fifth-round selection (150th overall) of the Rams in the 2012 NFL Draft. Watkins played collegiately at South Carolina where he was an All-SEC selection. The Fairburn, Ga., native prepped at Creekside High School, the same high school as Chiefs Pro Bowl safety Eric Berry.

Jones (6-3, 270) has played in 10 games (three starts) in two NFL seasons with the Indianapolis Colts (2012-13). He owns three receptions for 42 yards (14.0 avg.). He originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Colts on April 30, 2012. Jones spent the majority of his time with Indianapolis on the club’s practice squad roster and served a brief stint on Miami’s practice squad in 2012 as well. He played collegiately at Shepherd University where he totaled 34 receptions for 403 yards and nine touchdowns his senior season. The San Diego, Calif., native prepped at Horizon Christian Academy.

Brock (6-5, 260) has seen action in six contests in four NFL seasons. He owns five career catches for 63 yards (12.6 avg.). In four games with the Chiefs, Brock tallied three receptions for 36 yards (12.0 avg.). He originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Carolina Panthers in 2009. He first joined the Chiefs on Feb. 12, 2013 after stints in Buffalo (2011-12), Oakland (2010-11), Dallas (2010), Chicago (2009-10), Pittsburgh (2009) and with the New York Jets (2009). The Hackensack, N.J., native, played tight end at Rutgers and prepped at Hackensack High School.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Griffons defeat Northwest Missouri State 3-1 to sweep season series

MWSUMissouri Western volleyball defeated Northwest Missouri State 3-1 Tuesday evening at home to even its record in the MIAA at 6-6. Overall, the Griffons are also .500 with a 13-13 record.

Missouri Western jumped out to an 8-3 lead during the first set but quickly lost momentum. The Griffons fell behind soon after. The Bearcats pushed their way toward an 8-8 tie and eventually took over to win the set 25-21.

Erica Rottinghaus, the team-leader in kills, started out with a slow night but responded quickly in the second set. The junior had three kills in the set and gave the Griffons a 4-0 lead.

The lead extended to 11-4 and Missouri Western doubled the score soon after, taking a 16-8 lead after an attack error from Northwest. The Griffons won the set 25-19.

After the 1-1 tie, the Griffons won the third set 25-18. Rottinghaus had another 3-kill game countered by Kelsey Olion’s five kills in the third set.

Northwest led 6-5, but the Griffons went on a 5-2 run to take a 10-8 lead and never fell behind afterward. With a 2-1 lead, the Griffons controlled the fourth and final set of the night to win 25-16.

Olion led the team with 15 kills. Rottinghaus finished second with 13, giving her 333 kill so far this season. Leading the team with 42 assists was Jordan Chohon.Lindsey Partridge played a solid match which included a match-high seven blocks. It was also a career high for the sophomore. The Bearcats were led by Abby Graves who had 12 kills.

This was the second victory over Northwest this season. Earlier this season, the Griffons won 3-1.

The Griffons are still seventh in the conference but have a two-match lead over the No. 8 and ninth-place teams. With four matches remaining the Griffons can secure a post-season berth soon.

Next up for the Griffons is Missouri Southern. They’ll play the Lions Friday night at 7 p.m. at MWSU Fieldhouse.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Three Royals earn Gold Glove Awards

RoyalsThe Kansas City Royals made history on Tuesday night. For the first time, three Royals players took home American League Rawlings Gold Glove awards.

Left fielder Alex Gordon, first baseman Eric Hosmer and catcher Salvador Perez were honored as the best defenseman at their respective positions.

It is the first time since 1989 that Kansas City has had multiple players win a Gold Glove in the same season.

Gordon became the first Royal to win three-straight Gold Glove awards since second baseman Frank White won six straight from 1977-82.

Gordon joins Amos Otis (1971, 1973-74) as the only Royals outfielder to win three awards.

“I’ve got a trophy case back in Lincoln, so this one won’t be the chip-and-dip tray,” Gordon said. “This one will actually go up in the trophy case. It means a lot. The first one was pretty special, just because it’s the first one, but to be able to share it with two teammates makes this one the best one of all.”

Gordon tied for the Major-League lead with 17 outfield assists, after finishing second in 2012 and first in 2011.

His 54 assists since the start of 2011 are the most in baseball — 16 more than Detroit’s Torii Hunter. Gordon led AL left fielders in games played (160), innings (1,3641/3), total chances (341) and putouts (323), while committing just one error for a .997 fielding percentage.

Hosmer became the first Royals first baseman to be honored with a Gold Glove, and was the first Royals infielder to be honored since Mark Grudzielanek (2B) in 2006.

A finalist for a Gold Glove in 2012, Hosmer earned the award after leading AL first baseman in games played (158) and assists (122). He also finished second in innings (1,3721/3), total chances (1,335) and putouts (1,205). His .994 fielding percentage ranked fourth among the league’s first basemen with at least 1,200 chances.

Perez is just the second Royals’ catcher to be honored with a Gold Glove, joining Bob Boone in 1989.

Named an All-Star for the first time in his career, Perez led AL catchers in assists with 71, which was a team record. He also threw out 23 runners. His 35.2 caught stealing percentage ranked second among qualifying catchers. Perez also ranked second among AL backstops in games (137), innings (11151/3), total chances (1,008), putouts (930).

He was also charged with just three passed balls, the fewest among AL catchers with at least 100 games behind the plate.

The Royals now have 23 Gold Gloves honorees in franchise history.

— Associated Press —

Jayhawks cruise past Pitt State in exhibition opener

KUIn exclamation-mark fashion, freshman center Joel Embiid slammed a pass from Andrew Wiggins through the basket for a two-handed dunk in the final minutes of Kansas’ convincing 97-57 win over Pittsburg State in the first exhibition matchup of the 2013-14 season inside historic Allen Fieldhouse Tuesday night.

The unofficial outcome that comes with exhibition play did nothing to tamper with the excitement of seeing KU’s second-ranked recruiting class on the court for the first time. Senior Tarik Black and freshmen Andrew Wiggins and Wayne Selden, Jr., each made the starting lineup, joined by veteran junior guard Naadir Tharpe and sophomore forward Perry Ellis.

Ironically, the loudest play of the night didn’t result in points for the country’s No. 1 recruit – but rather an assist. Wiggins’ dime pass hit Embiid in perfect stride, allowing him to slam the ball through the hoop much to the delight of the 16,300 fans who made it out to the informal season opener.

Although his first touch resulted in a turnover and he hit his first shot at the 9:36 mark in the first half, Wiggins’ night took a sharp turn upward as his 16 points tied Ellis for the team lead. His teammates made sure he wasn’t the center of attention as four different Jayhawks chalked up double figures in the win. The duo was was joined on the leaderboard by sophomore guard Andrew White III (12) and freshman guard Brannen Greene (10), who each came in off the bench.

Black topped the rebounding effort with 11 as Kansas doubled up the visiting Gorillas on the boards, 51-26. Tharpe, meanwhile, had more assists (9) on his own than the opposing total (6). The Jayhawks finished 35-of-65 (53.8 percent) from the floor, while holding the Gorillas to 17-of-54 (31.5 percent) shooting.

For Pittsburg State, junior guard Devon Branch led all scorers with 27 points, while junior forward Alex Williams added 15 points.

Two fouls apiece before the first media timeout sidelined Black and Selden for a chunk of the first half. White was the first off the bench and the country’s best incoming center, Embiid, followed suit to relieve Black. Those fouls kept the Gorillas in it early. While Kansas held Pitt State without a field goal for nearly six minutes to open the game, the Gorillas benefitted from free throws. Two from junior forward Alex Williams saw Pitt State cut what once was a 9-3 lead to a mere two points. An up-and-under layup from Trevor Gregory tied the score, 11-11.

With the newcomers on display, the veteran Jayhawks stepped up. White drove the lane for a layup and Ellis knocked down his third and fourth buckets of the game to try and put distance between the home and visiting teams – but it wasn’t happening. A three from the corner by PSU guard Josiah Gustafson sliced the Jayhawk lead to a single point, 21-20.

Fittingly, Wiggins’ first basket of the night kicked off an 8-0 Jayhawk run, allowing the first sizable lead of the night. Four points from redshirt freshman Landen Lucas and a bucket from Ellis propelled Kansas to a 29-20 advantage in less than two minutes. Greene chimed in with his first of three three-pointers and sent KU to the final media timeout leading, 39-28. Tharpe and White broke loose for 10 combined points and when halftime arrived, Kansas had quickly switched to blowout mode, 50-32.

KU’s mounting offense paused for a defensive stand to start the second half. By the first media timeout, both teams had scored only once, but KU’s defense around the basket started to pick up – led by Black. The senior transfer disrupted multiple shots to open the second frame, recording a block in the process. His offensive rebounding was equally impressive, pulling down back-to-back offensive boards and converting them to layups around the 15-minute mark. His effort helped Kansas clamp down on a 27-2 edge in second-chance points.

With that, the scoring was underway. Black’s put-backs lifted KU’s lead over the 20-point plateau and another three from White saw the Jayhawk advantage surge to 25 with 13 minutes still remaining.

Churning out points with more than a 50-percent accuracy, Kansas was rolling. Greene nailed two-straight three pointers and slash layup by freshman guard Frank Mason pushed the lead past the 30-point mark, 77-46, with eight minutes on the clock.

Wiggins and Ellis teamed up for a 12-2 run headed into the final media timeout and Black’s free throw directly out of the break pushed Kansas close in on the century mark. Embiid’s crowd-roaring slam all but finished up the 97-57 win.

— KU Sports Information —

Mizzou’s Sam named a semifinalist for Bednarik Award

MUMizzou Football senior defensive end Michael Sam (Hitchcock, Texas) has been announced as a semifinalist for the 19th Chuck Bednarik Award for the Outstanding Defensive Player of the Year. Currently the Southeastern Conference and national sacks leader with 10.0 to his credit, Sam was one of 16 candidates picked by the Maxwell Football Club National Selection Committee.

Sam’s outstanding All-America caliber season has included three multi-sack games, first with 3.0 sacks against Arkansas State (Sept. 28) and then following with two more 3.0-sack performances in Mizzou wins at Vanderbilt (Oct. 5) and vs. Florida (Oct. 19). The 3.0-sack stat line has only been accomplished 23 total times across the Football Bowl Subdivision. Sam also leads the SEC and nation in tackles-for-loss with his 16.0 total (2.00 per game).

League recognition has come in steadily for the Tiger defender, with Sam earning two SEC Defensive Line Player of the Week awards (Sept. 28, Oct. 5) and one SEC Defensive Player of the Week honor (Oct. 19). Sam is one of just two players from the SEC to be named a semifinalist.

The winner of the 19th Chuck Bednarik Award will be announced as part of the Home Depot College Football Awards Show which will be broadcast on ESPN on Dec. 12. Three finalists will be announced on Nov. 25, and a second round of voting will take place at that time. The formal presentation of the award will be made at the Maxwell Football Club’s Awards Dinner on Feb. 28, 2014 in Atlantic City, N.J.

Semifinalist voting will begin on Wednesday, Oct. 30, and close on Sunday, Nov. 24. Eligible voters include Maxwell Football Club members, NCAA head football coaches, sports information directors and selected national media.

No. 10 Mizzou (7-1, 3-1) continues at home with SEC foe Tennessee (4-4, 1-3) on Saturday, Nov. 2, with kickoff at 6 p.m. on ESPN.

— MU Sports Information —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File