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Griffon football sits seventh in first Super Region Three poll

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western football team sits in 7th place in the first Super Region Three rankings which was released Monday afternoon.

Four other MIAA schools are ranked in the poll with Northwest Missouri State sitting in 1st, Pittsburg State 6th, Washburn 8th and Emporia State 9th.

The top two teams in the region get a bye in the first week of the playoffs while four will host five and three will host six on Saturday, November 23.

The Griffons region consisst of teams from the Northern Sun Incollegiate Conference, Great American Conference and the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association.

The Griffons continue MIAA play on Saturday, November 2 when they take on the 14th ranked Emporia State Hornets in St. Joseph, Mo. Game time is set for 1:30 pm from Spratt Stadium. The Hornets are ranked 9th in the region.

SUPER REGION THREE
1     Northwest Missouri State     8-0     8-0
2     Minnesota State-Mankato     8-0     8-0
3     Minnesota Duluth     7-1     7-1
4     St. Cloud State     7-1     7-1
5     Henderson State     8-0     8-0
6     Pittsburg State     6-1     7-1
7     Missouri Western State     7-1     7-1
8     Washburn     8-0     8-0
9     Emporia State     7-0     7-0
10     Harding     5-2     5-2

— MWSU Sports Information —

Cardinals drop Game 5 and fall behind Red Sox 3-2

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Jon Lester pitched the Boston Red Sox within a whisker of yet another World Series championship.

Now, this bearded band goes back to Fenway Park just one win away.

”Pretty special time,” Lester said.

Lester bested Adam Wainwright once again, journeyman David Ross hit a tiebreaking double in the seventh inning and the Red Sox downed the St. Louis Cardinals 3-1 Monday night to take a 3-2 Series edge.

David Ortiz delivered his latest big hit, too, putting Boston in position to capture its third crown in a decade. Not since 1918 have the Red Sox clinched the title at their century-old bandbox.

”The fact is we’re going home,” manager John Farrell said. ”Going back to a place that our guys love to play in, in front of our fans.”

”This atmosphere here, these three games, has been phenomenal. We know it’s going to be equal to that, if not better. And we’re excited about going home in the position we are,” he said.

Said Ortiz: ”It’s going to get loud out there.”

John Lackey gets the first chance to win it Wednesday night against St. Louis rookie sensation Michael Wacha. A Cardinals victory would set up a most spooky proposition for both teams – Game 7 on Halloween night.

”It will be legendary if we go into Boston and win two games,” Wainwright said.

Ortiz enjoyed even more success in Game 5 after moving up from cleanup to the third slot. He is 11 for 15 (.733) in this Series with two homers, six RBIs and four walks.

Ortiz left in a double switch, shortly after legging out a hit in the eighth. He was OK, and he’d already done enough damage to the Cardinals.

”What planet’s that guy from?” Ross said.

Lester enhanced his reputation as an October ace with every pitch. He allowed one run and four hits in 7 2-3 innings, striking out seven without a walk. Nearly the same line he had in beating Wainwright in the opener.

”I think the biggest thing is me and Rossy have had a good rhythm,” Lester said. ”Early on, we just went back to our game plan from Game 1 and just fell back on that and really just tried to make them swing the bats early, and we were able to do that.”

The lefty who’s won all three of his career World Series starts had just one scary inning, when Matt Holliday homered in the fourth, Carlos Beltran flied out to the wall and Yadier Molina hit a liner. Other than that, Lester was sharp as a knife while retiring 12 in a row.

He tweaked himself late, but said he was all right. In fact, Lester’s biggest brush with major trouble came well before his first pitch.

Lester was getting loose near the warning track when a team of eight Clydesdales pulling a beer wagon came trotting by – it’s a Busch Stadium tradition and Lester moved aside to watch the horses.

He also took a brief break in the seventh. A giant paper airplane floated down from the stands, and some fans cheered its flight as it landed near the mound. Lester handed it to a ballboy, and retired Molina to end the inning.

”It was a tough loss. It was 1-1 in the seventh – that was obviously the game. Tip your cap to Ross, he hit a double to take the lead,” Wainwright said. ”Their guy Lester did a good job.”

Lester did it without any flap over his glove. During Game 1, a Cardinals minor league pitcher posted a picture on Twitter of discoloration on Lester’s mitt and wondered if some foreign substance was there.

Lester said he merely used rosin for a better grip, and Major League Baseball said it didn’t see anything wrong.

Koji Uehara got four outs for his second save. No crazy endings this time, either, following one night with an obstruction call and the next with Uehara’s game-finishing pickoff.

The Cardinals went quickly in the ninth, and now need two wins in Boston. They overcame a 3-2 deficit at home to beat Texas for the 2011 title.

”The guys know what we have to do,” manager Mike Matheny said. ”We have to play the game. They have to lock arms, trust each other and play the game the right way. Most of it is going to be the mentality of not buying into any kind of stats, any kind of predictions, any kind of odds. And go out and play the game.”

Ortiz put Boston ahead with an RBI double in the first, hitting the first pitch after Dustin Pedroia doubled on an 0-2 curve. Ortiz singled the next time up and tied the Series record by reaching base in nine straight plate appearances.

Big Papi and the Red Sox took two of three at the NL park despite playing without a designated hitter. Ortiz became the first baseman, putting slugger Mike Napoli on the bench.

The Red Sox lead the Series despite a .205 team batting average. Ortiz has one-third of the team’s 33 hits.

Ross, a graybeard on a team led by scraggly veterans, broke a 1-all tie when he hooked a drive just inside the left-field line, and the ball bounced into the seats for a go-ahead double.

”How about that? It’s nice to drive in runs,” Ross said. ”I’ve got to credit the guys in front of me.”

Jacoby Ellsbury later hit an RBI single, and Ross was thrown out at the plate trying to score on the play.

A day after Ortiz delivered a stirring, in-game pep talk to rev up the Red Sox, the Cardinals could’ve used some inspiration themselves – perhaps a visit from the good-luck Rally Squirrel from their 2011 title run.

The St. Louis hitters went quietly, a couple slinging their bats after routine popups and fly balls and others questioning the solid calls by plate umpire Bill Miller.

Holliday shook St. Louis’ slumber and broke Lester’s string with his second home run of the Series. Lester had pitched 16 1-3 scoreless innings in his first three World Series starts before Holliday tagged him.

That was all St. Louis got. Not even a revamped lineup that included the hobbled Allen Craig helped the Cards.

Wainwright changed things the next time Ortiz came up, varying his tempo and delivery. Ortiz still hit it hard while lining out to center.

Wainwright struck out 10 in seven innings, becoming the first Cardinals pitcher to reach double digits in the Series since Bob Gibson did it twice in 1968 against Detroit.

It was a big sports night in St. Louis, with an NFL game between the Rams and Seattle eight blocks away at the Edward Jones Dome. This is a baseball town, clearly: Football tickets sold for $10 on StubHub as kickoff approached, and fans inside the dome loudly booed when the World Series game was taken off the video board.

The baseball fans got to see Lester do more than pitch. He helped himself in the field, knocking down a hard comebacker and swiftly handling a bunt. He also made a dent with his bat, sort of.

Coming in with a career 0-for-31 mark at the plate, he nubbed a ball in front of the plate and was thrown out leading off the third. But at least he broke Wainwright’s string of five straight strikeouts, one shy of the postseason record tied by Detroit’s Justin Verlander against Boston in the AL championship series.

— Associated Press —

Western falls to No. 12 in latest AFCA Top 25 football poll

riggertMissouriWesternAfter falling 34-14 last week against the then ranked No. 12 Pittsburg State Gorillas the Missouri Western football team dropped eight spots to 12th in the latest American Football Coaches Association poll. Before the loss the Griffons had opened up the season 7-0 which tied the best start in school history which was also done in 1981.

Among other MIAA schools, Northwest Missouri State is ranked No. 2 while Pittsburg State is 7th, Washburn is 8th and Emporia State is 14th.

Missouri Western has been ranked in the top 25 in the last 27 polls and has received votes in 47 of the last 48 polls by the American Football Coaches Association.

The Griffons return to action this week with a top-25 battle against the #14 Emporia State Hornets. It will Youth Day at Spratt Stadium with kickoff set for Saturday, November 2 at 1:30 pm from Spratt Stadium in St. Joseph, Mo.

— MWSU Sports Information —

MIAA hands out weekly football awards

riggertMIAAPittsburg State’s Jeff Seybold, Jr. was named the MIAA Offensive Athlete of the Week. Central Missouri Josh Powell was named the Defensive Athlete of the Week and Zach Gebhardt was named the Special Teams Athlete of the Week.

MIAA Offensive Athlete of the Week
Jeff Seybold, Jr., RB, Pittsburg State

Seybold, Jr. carried the ball a career-high 24 times for 179 yards and three touchdowns to lead 12th ranked Pitt State to a 34-14 victory over previously unbeaten and fourth ranked Missouri Western Saturday. He scored on a 23-yard run in the second quarter and he added runs of 3 and 6 yards in the second half as the Gorillas pulled away from the Griffons after leading 13-7 at halftime. Seybold, who leads the MIAA with 16 total touchdowns on the season, also caught two passes for 26 yards in the contest. The 5-11 sophomore running back is a native of Lincoln, Neb. where he competed at Lincoln Southwest High School prior to redshirting at Nebraska-Omaha.

MIAA Defensive Athlete of the Week
Josh Powell, DE, Central Missouri

Powell finished with six tackles in UCM’s 51-7 win over Northeastern State, but three of his six tackles were quarterback sacks totaling 24 yards in losses. He helped lead a defense that held the RiverHawks to just 215 yards of total offense, including 39 yards rushing on 35 attempts. His three sacks are tied for the sixth most in a single game in UCM history. As a unit the Mules registered 14 tackles for loss and seven sacks, the seven sacks are tied for the fourth most in a game in school history. The 6-3 freshman defensive end is a native of Columbia, Mo. where he competed at Columbia-Rockbridge High School.

MIAA Special Teams Athlete of the Week
Zach, Gebhardt, K, Central Missouri

Gebhardt went three for three in field goals and was six for six in extra point attempts for 15 points in the Mules 51-7 win over Northeastern State. His 15 points scored are tied for the fifth most by a kicker in a single game in UCM history. He made field goals of 33, 30 and 34 yards. He kicked off 10 times with a 62.4 yard average and five touchbacks. Only once on a kickoff did the RiverHawks start past their own 25-yard line. The 6-2 senior kicker is a native of Archie, Mo. where he competed at Archie High School.

— MIAA Press Release —

Kansas State’s Zimmerman named semifinalist for Thorpe Award

KSUKansas State senior defensive back Ty Zimmerman is one of 15 semifinalists for the Jim Thorpe Award as the nation’s top defensive back, the Jim Thorpe Association announced Monday.

A product of Junction City, Kan., Zimmerman is the fifth individual in school history to be named a semifinalist following Jamie Mendez (1993), Chris Canty (1995 and 1996), Terence Newman (2001 and 2002) and Nigel Malone (2011 and 2012). Additionally, he is just the second safety in Kansas State history to earn semifinal status (Mendez).

Zimmerman has recorded 55 tackles this season to rank second on the team and tied for fifth in the Big 12. He picked off his 11th career pass against Louisiana and returned it 32 yards for his first career touchdown. He is tied for sixth in school history in career interceptions and ranks fourth in career interception-return yards (178). In addition, Zimmerman has broken up four other passes, has three tackles for loss and forced a fumble last week against West Virginia that led to a K-State touchdown.

One of the most experienced players in K-State history, Zimmerman has started 43 career games to rank fifth nationally among active players, while he has 237 tackles to sit just 12 shy of entering the school’s career top-25 list.

The three Thorpe Award finalists will be named on Monday, November 25 and the winner will be announced at the Home Depot College Football Awards Show on December 12 airing on ESPN. The winner of the 2013 Thorpe Award will be honored at a banquet in Oklahoma City on February 4, 2014.

Kansas State concludes a three-game homestand this Saturday with a 2:30 p.m., contest against Iowa State at Bill Snyder Family Stadium that will be televised nationally by FOX Sports 1.

— KSU Sports Information —

Chiefs hold off Cleveland, go to 8-0

ChiefsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs know that they’re going to get the opposing team’s best shot every time they step on the field.

That comes with being the NFL’s lone unbeaten team.

They wouldn’t want it any other way.

”We love it,” Chiefs quarterback Alex Smith said. ”You want the stages to get bigger. That’s why you put all the work in. You want this opportunity. You want that honor.”

The Chiefs got another stiff test from the Cleveland Browns on Sunday, racing out to a big first-half lead and then holding on through a harrowing second half.

The result was a tenuous 23-17 victory and just the second 8-0 start in franchise history.

”I mean, not that anybody sneaks up on anybody in this league, but yeah, we’re the only undefeated team,” said Smith, who threw for 225 yards and two touchdowns.

”I think that teams have recognized how we’re playing and no question, they’re coming prepared.”

Jason Campbell, starting in place of the ineffective Brandon Weeden, threw for 293 yards and two touchdowns for the Browns.

His second scoring pass, a 17-yarder to Fozzy Whittaker out of the backfield, got Cleveland within a field goal early in the third quarter.

The Chiefs kept making stops down the stretch, though. They punted with 3:55 left, but forced Campbell out of the pocket on fourth down, and his pass bounced off wide receiver Davone Bess for an incompletion. It was one of several drops for Bess, who also fumbled on a punt return.

Ryan Succop tacked on his third field goal of the game with 17 seconds left, and the Browns were unable to do anything with their final possession before time expired.

”We weren’t able to make the plays at the end there to win the game,” Brown coach Rob Chudzinski said. ”Kansas City started fast and we weren’t able to get anything going early in the game. I thought our guys did a great job of fighting and getting back in the game.

”We were in position a couple of times,” he said, ”one break or one play.”

Josh Gordon had five catches for 132 yards and a touchdown in what could be his final game for the Browns. They’ve been fielding offers for him ahead of Tuesday’s trade deadline.

”I know just as much as you all know,” Gordon said. ”When it happens, if it doesn’t happen, we’ll know at the same time.”

The Chiefs marched downfield on the game’s opening possession before settling for Succop’s first field goal, and then did the exact same thing when they got the ball back moments later.

Kansas City eventually reached the end zone early in the second quarter when Smith found fullback Anthony Sherman out of the backfield on third-and-10. He picked up a couple of marvelous blocks and rumbled 12 yards for his first career score and a 13-0 lead.

Meanwhile, the Browns’ offense struggled to get on track, going three-and-out on their first three series. Campbell overshot a couple of wide receivers, but the real problem was their lack of a running game – they had three carries for minus-1 yard at halftime.

”We have to start faster,” Campbell said.

It took some trickery for Cleveland to score. Campbell handed off to Willis McGahee, who flipped it back to the quarterback, and he hit Gordon in stride for a 39-yard reception.

The good vibes on their sideline were short-lived, though.

Jamaal Charles ripped off two long runs, including one to convert another third down – the Chiefs were 9 of 12 in the half – to get into Cleveland territory. Smith finished the drive by hitting Dexter McCluster down the seam for a 28-yard scoring pass.

The Browns managed to get a field goal to get within 20-10 just before the break, and then carried the momentum into the second half, closing within a field goal on Whittaker’s TD catch.

That was as close as the Chiefs defense would allow them to get.

”The best you can be right now is 8-0 and that’s where we’re at,” Chiefs linebacker Derrick Johnson said. ”Everybody’s going to give us their best. We know that. If we can take that punch and keep rolling, that’s what we did today. It wasn’t pretty, but a ‘W’ sure does look good.”

— Associated Press —

No. 4 Griffons lose at home to 12th-ranked Pittsburg State

MWSUFor the first time in 2013 the 4th ranked Missouri Western football team lost. The Griffons fell 34-14 against 12th ranked Pittsburg State on the 2nd Annual Military Appreciation day. Reggie Jordan had two touchdown catches as the Griffons fall to 7-1 overall and 6-1 in MIAA play.

Despite controlling the time of possession in the first quarter the Griffons could only manage 70 yards on 21 plays. Raphael Spencer had 33 yards on seven carries while Derek Libby caught three passes for 14 yards. The Gorillas hit a big pass down the middle to Gavin Lutman which helped set them up for a 41 yard Connor Frazell field goal. PSU took the lead 3-0 after one quarter.

The Gorillas went up 10-0 when Jeff Seybold capped an 11 play 76 yard drive with a 23 yard touchdown run giving Pittsburg State the 10-0 lead with 11:27 to play in the quarter. The Gorillas got the ball back were driving to extend its lead but a completion off a tipped pass to offensive lineman Ollie Venegas turned into a fumble which MWSU recoverd at its own nine yard line.

The Griffons finally got on the board when Travis Partridge connected with Reggie Jordan from 67 yards out cutting the PSU lead to 10-7 with 5:15 to play in the half. The Gorillas put a drive together at the end of the half with Frazell connecting from 22 yards out giving PSU the 13-7 lead at the half.

At the half the Griffons had 158 yards with just 33 on the ground. Spencer had 36 yards on eight carries. Partridge completed 10-of-16 passes for 125 yards with Josh Walker and Libby both making three catches. Yomi Alli had seven tackles in the half.

The Gorillas had 230 yards with 98 on the ground and 132 through the air. Seybold had 79 yards on 11 carries while Anthony Abenoja completed 10-of-18 passes for 132 yards. John Brown caught three passes for 29 yards while Lutman and two receptions for 56 yards. Nate Dreiling led the way defensively with six tackles.

The first drive of the second half for the Griffons looked good as they drove down to the PSU 35 yard line. Spencer had a run of nine and 30 yards helping the Griffons drive into PSU territory. The drive would stall out and on a 52 yard field goal try PSU’s Jason Peete blocked the kick and scampered in giving the Gorillas the 20-7 lead with 11:01 to play in the quarter.

Neither team scored the rest of the quarter but in the fourth Seybold capped an eight play 71 yard drive by the Gorillas with his second TD of the game from three yards out putting Pittsburg State up 27-7.

The Griffons responded with a drive of its own going 75 yards on eight plays. Partridge connected with Jordan from 14 yards out cutting the PSU lead to 27-14 with 9:35 to play.

That would be all the offense for the Griffons as Pittsburg State scored once more taking the victory. Pittsburg State improves to 7-1 overall and 6-1 in MIAA play.

The Gorillas had 471 yards of offense with 280 coming on the ground. Seybold finished with 179 yards and three touchdowns. Abenoja completed 13-of-25 passes for 191 yards with Brown catching four passes for 48 yards. Dreiling had 11 tackles on the day.

Partridge finished with 193 yards and two touchdowns while Stephon Weaver had three catches for 56 yards. Spencer had 101 yards on 16 carries while Alli finished with 15 tackles and Marcus Thompson finished with 10.

Things don’t get any easier for the Griffons as they host the 17th ranked Emporia State Hornets on Saturday, November 2nd in St. Joseph, Mo. Kickoff is set for 1:30 pm in Spratt Stadium.

— MWSU Sports Information —

No. 2 Bearcats roll past Missouri Southern to remain unbeaten

Northwest2013riggertThanksgiving came about a month early for the Northwest Missouri State defensive line.

Excuse the cliché, but the Northwest front line must have been licking their chops Saturday afternoon when Missouri Southern entered Bearcat Stadium running a triple option offense. Although the Lions broke off a couple of nice runs, they were stuffed by the Bearcats much of the game. It was another impressive performance as Northwest won, 43-7, in front of 8,257 fans on a gorgeous Homecoming afternoon in Maryville.

“I am so proud of these kids. This isn’t an easy offense to prepare for,” said Northwest defensive coordinator Rich Wright. “They deserve 100 percent of the credit. They are the ones who busted their tails all week watching the film and the ones who had to execute responsibility football, which is what it takes to be successful against the option.

“They played physical. They flew around to the football and did an awesome job today.”

Northwest, ranked No. 2 in NCAA Division II in the AFCA Coaches Poll, improved to 8-0 overall and 7-0 in the MIAA.

Offensively, senior running back Billy Creason was the star. He was selected MVP of the Homecoming game and received the Don Black Award. Creason finished with 94 total yards and scored a touchdown on the ground and one receiving.

But as a unit, Northwest defense played the lead role in the victory.

The Bearcats went five straight quarters without giving up a point until the Lions scored a meaningless touchdown with 4 minutes left in the game.

“We are always looking for the challenge,” said linebacker Eric Reimer. “They put up a ton of yardage running every week. Our goal was to stop them and be physical upfront. Our D-line did an awesome job of creating chaos.”

Despite the one-sided score, Northwest needed to play well in the third quarter to come away with an easy win.

Leading 17-0 at halftime, the Bearcats took their game to another level in the third quarter. Northwest allowed no yards passing in the first half and that continued in the third quarter. The Lions only picked up 41 yards on the ground in the third quarter.

“It is awesome to go against a team that wants to be physical and run it up on you,” said defensive lineman Matt Longacre. “We stopped it fairly well today. They still got yards on us, but we feel very confident going into the next few games that we can stop the run.”

Meanwhile, the Bearcats really got on track on offense. They scored two rushing touchdowns in the third quarter and built a commanding 29-0 lead.

“We always harp on the first drive of the second half is the most important of the game,” said wide receiver Bryce Young, who scored on an 8-yard run that capped a 5-play, 53-yard drive that took just 1 minute, 20 seconds at the start of the third quarter.

“As an offense, we drove down and scored and did a really good job of putting them away and put some doubt in their minds.”

Northwest tacked on two more touchdowns early in the fourth quarter. It was their sixth blowout in their last seven games.

The game was fairly close in the first half. In fact, the Lions had a chance to close to within three-points early in the second quarter.

Once again, the defense showed its toughness when it stopped Southern from punching in a touchdown on 4th and goal from the 1.

It made sense for the Lions to go for it. They were trailing 10-0 and figured they needed a touchdown to keep pace with Northwest.

After all, Southern watched the Bearcats take their first possession at the 39 and needed only 2:08 to go 61 yards and score on a 3-yard run by Robert Burton. The extra point gave Northwest a 7-0 lead less than 4 minutes into the game and the Bearcats kicked off.

“It was big because at the time, the game was relatively tight,” Wright said. “If they get a score, they are right back in the game. One thing we talk about is never conceding anything.”

The Lions, though, had one final chance after they failed to score on the goal line. They stopped Northwest and then got the ball at the Bearcats 47.

But the Northwest defense was too much for the Lions to generate consistent offense.

Southern, though, was also playing pretty good defense, stopping the Bearcats.

So it was time for Northwest special teams to step up. Creason was credited with a blocked punt and that gave Northwest great field position.

It only took one play for Creason to rush for a 5-yard touchdown that gave Northwest a 17-0 lead with 9:27 left in the second quarter.

— Northwest Sports Information —

No. 5 Mizzou blows 17-point 4th quarter lead, loses in 2 OTs to South Carolina

MUCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Connor Shaw came off the bench in the second half to lead a 17-point rally, throwing for 201 yards and three touchdowns, and Elliott Fry kicked the go-ahead field goal in the second overtime to help No. 20 South Carolina stun No. 5 Missouri 27-24 on Saturday night.

After Fry put the Gamecocks ahead from 40 yards out, Missouri’s Andrew Baggett missed a 24-yard attempt off the left goal post.

Missouri (7-1, 3-1) could have all but locked up the SEC East with a victory, instead South Carolina (6-2, 4-2 SEC) moves to within one game of the Tigers for the division lead, with home games against Mississippi State and Florida remaining.

A sprain left knee kept Shaw from starting, but he entered the game in the third quarter and helped the Gamecocks score the final 17 points of regulation. He also threw a 15-yard touchdown pass on fourth down in the Gamecocks’ first overtime to match the Tigers’ Marcus Murphy’s 1-yard scamper.

Shaw engineered fourth-quarter scoring drives of 65, 69 and 63 yards, and the Gamecocks knotted the score at 17 on a two-yard reception by Nick Jones with 42 seconds remaining. Ellington scored his first touchdown on a 6-yard catch with 12:13 remaining, and Elliott Fry added a 20-yard field goal with 5:03 left.

Mike Davis caught three screen passes on South Carolina’s final scoring drive in regulation, partly making up for two fumbles in the first half. The Gamecocks turned the ball over three consecutive times in the second quarter, helping Missouri take a 14-0 halftime lead.

Davis, who led the conference with 125.6 rushing yards per game entering the night, committed his first miscue at the Missouri 29-yard line with 12:30 remaining in the half, and his second halted a 71-yard drive at the Tigers’ 2-yard line with 5:46 left. He finished the night with 51 rushing yards and 99 receiving yards while backup Shon Carson added 27 on the ground and 14 through the air.

Davis’ second fumble set the stage for a 96-yard touchdown pass from Mauk to L’Damian Washington on Missouri’s ensuing drive. Two yards deep in his own end zone, Mauk found Washington streaking toward the middle of the field for an easy first down, and then the receiver eluded two tackles at his 45-yard line before being untouched the rest of the way. The pass was Missouri’s longest since a 98-yarder from Pete Woods to Joe Stewart at Nebraska in 1976.

Mauk struggled out of the gate, throwing a pass dropped by defender Sharrod Golightly and then an interception to Kaiwan Lewis, a far cry from the 41-yard pass and 20-yard touchdown toss he threw in his opening attempts last week in a 36-17 win against Florida. But Mauk then completed three of his next four to set up Missouri’s first touchdown, an 11-yard scamper by Murphy with 1:23 left in the first quarter.

The Tigers added a 27-yard field goal by Baggett with 6:46 left in the third quarter before he missed a 46-yarder in the fourth quarter wide left.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis takes 2-1 series lead with walk off win on obstruction call

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Third baseman Will Middlebrooks tripped Allen Craig for a game-ending obstruction call on Jon Jay’s ninth-inning grounder, giving the St. Louis Cardinals a bizarre 5-4 win over the Boston Red Sox on Saturday night and a 2-1 World Series lead.

Boston had tied the score with two runs in the eighth, and Yadier Molina singled with one out in the ninth off loser Brandon Workman. Craig pinch hit and lined Koji Uehara’s first pitch down the left-field line for a double that put runners on second and third.

With the infield in, Jay hit a grounder to diving second baseman Dustin Pedroia. He threw home to catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia, who tagged out the sliding Molina. Saltalamacchia threw offline past third, and Middlebrooks, with his stomach on the field, raised both legs and tripped Craig.

Third base umpire Jim Joyce immediately signaled obstruction, and even though a sliding Craig was tagged by Saltalamacchia at the plate following the throw by left fielder Daniel Nava, plate umpire Dana DeMuth signaled safe and then pointed to third, making clear the obstruction had been called.

The Red Sox scored twice in the eighth inning to tie it 4-all. Jacoby Ellsbury led off with a single and Shane Victorino was hit by a pitch for the sixth time this postseason. Both runners moved up on Pedroia’s groundout, and David Ortiz was intentionally walked.

Cardinals manager Mike Matheny went to hard-throwing closer Trevor Rosenthal with the bases loaded, hoping for a five-out save from a rookie who has looked almost untouchable this October. But the Red Sox pushed two runs across.

Nava drove in one with a short-hop grounder that was smothered by second baseman Kolten Wong, who had just entered on defense in a double-switch.

Wong went to second for the forceout, but Nava beat the relay and Ellsbury scored to make it 4-3. Xander Bogaerts tied it when he chopped a single up the middle.

Workman jammed Matt Holliday and retired the slugger on a routine fly with two on to end the bottom of the eighth. That sent the game to the ninth tied at 4.

Holliday’s two-run double puts the Cardinals on top 4-2 in the seventh.

It was a tough inning for Red Sox reliever Craig Breslow. Matt Carpenter reached safely when he checked his swing on an infield single to shortstop. Carlos Beltran was grazed on the elbow pad by a pitch — making no effort to get out of the way.

Beltran, in fact, almost appeared to stick his elbow out just a tiny bit to make sure the ball made contact.

Junichi Tazawa came on and Holliday pulled a grounder past Middlebrooks at third. The ball kicked into the left-field corner and Holliday went all the way to third on the throw to the plate.

Tazawa then got a couple of strikeouts and prevented further damage.

It was Middlebrooks’ first inning in the field. He entered as a pinch-hitter in the top of the seventh and took over at third base in the bottom half.

That shifted Bogaerts to shortstop — and neither one was able to make the difficult defensive play Boston needed in that inning.

Cardinals starter Joe Kelly, one of the few major league pitchers to wear glasses on the mound, set down his first nine batters. The Red Sox seemed to see him better the next time around in coming back from a 2-0 deficit.

Bogaerts opened the fifth with a triple that banged-up right fielder Beltran couldn’t quite reach. The rookie later scored on a grounder by pinch-hitter Mike Carp.

Victorino drew a leadoff walk from Kelly in the sixth and wound up scoring the tying run. Ortiz grounded a single off lefty reliever Randy Choate, and Nava greeted Seth Maness with an RBI single that made it 2-all.

Their fielding woes from Game 1 far behind them, the slick-fielding Cardinals made several sharp plays. Kelly barehanded a one-hopper, Carpenter threw out a runner from his knees up the middle and third baseman David Freese backhanded a line drive.

St. Louis quickly broke ahead, scoring in the first inning for the first time this October on RBI singles by Holliday and Yadier Molina. After the Cardinals got three hits in a span of four pitches, Red Sox reliever Felix Doubront began heating up in a hurry before Jake Peavy settled down.

Peavy wriggled out of bases-loaded, no-out jam in the fourth to keep the Cardinals’ lead at 2-0. He got some help, too, from St. Louis third base coach Jose Oquendo.

With runners on first and second, Jay hit a sharp single to center. The Red Sox were conceding a run and ready to let Molina score from second, but Oquendo held up the slow-footed catcher.

Peavy actually lowered his career postseason ERA by more than a full run, down to 9.27 in five winless starts.

A day before Kelly and Peavy faced each other, they sounded totally different.

Kelly kidded about his pregame preparation: He stays up all night taking on his Twitter followers, shooting away in “Call of Duty,” the popular first-person war video game.

Peavy, meanwhile, was already ramped up and ready to go.

“This is what I’ve lived for my whole life,” he said Friday. “I’m as prepared as I’ll ever be, physically, mentally.”

— Associated Press —

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