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High School Football Scores – Friday, October 18

riggertFootballWEEK 8
CITY
Central 48, Park Hill 20

Lafayette 31, Bishop LeBlond 7

Cameron 31, Benton 14

St. Joseph Christian 46, DeKalb 20

AREA
MEC
Maryville 28, Savannah 9

Smithville 29, Chillicothe 27

KCI
Lathrop 66, East Buchanan 42

Lawson 41. Mid-Buchanan 7

Plattsburg 18, West Platte 14

Hamilton 55, North Platte 12

GRC
South Harrison 50, Maysville 14

Gallatin 28, Albany 14

King City 56, Polo 26

Braymer 32, Princeton 18

8-MAN
275
North Nodaway 68, Craig-Fairfax 22

Mound City 50, Nodaway-Holt 0

Rock Port 44, Tarkio 38

West Nodaway 60, South Holt 14

Stanberry 76, Worth County 28

PVC
North Andrew 52, Southwest Livingston 28

South Nodaway 34, Stewartsville 22

Lincoln 52, Union Star 0

MWSU soccer gets a 1-1 draw with Fort Hays State

MWSUThe Missouri Western soccer team battled the Fort Hays State Tigers to a 1-1 double overtime tie on a chilly Friday evening at Spratt Stadium. Ashley Juravich picked up her third goal of the season as the Griffons improve to 2-10-2 overall and 0-6-1 in MIAA play.

The Griffons snapped their scoreless streak in the first half when Juravich scored her third goal of the season in the 9th minute giving MWSU a 1-0 lead.

Five minutes later the Tigers tied the score at one when Amanda Talbott took an assist from Hailey Davey. It was Talbott’s fourth goal of the season.

The Griffons had four shots in the half with three shots on goal. K.C. Ramsell had two shots with one on goal while Sarah Lyle made four saves.

The Tigers had seven shot with all three coming from Talbott. Kelsey Grey had two saves. Both teams had two corner kicks in the frame.

The two teams had their opportunities in the second half as the Griffons had seven shots in the frame and the Tigers had five with one hitting the post.

The Griffons trailed in the shot category after regulation 12-11 but has seven on goal to the Tigers six. Ramsell had three shots while Talbott and Jordan Hester had three.

Grey had six saves while Lyle had five. Both teams had nine fouls with the taking five corner kicks to the Tigers four.

Neither team got much going in overtime number one as the Tigers had four shots with one on goal. The Tigers had one corner kick in the frame.

In the second frame the two teams continued to produce chances as the Griffons best chance came off the foot of Juravich.

The Griffons finished with 13 shots with nine on goal as Ramsell had four shots with three on goal. Lyle had eight saves in net.

The Tigers had 20 shots with nine on goal. Talbott had six shots with four on goal while Grey had eight saves.

Missouri Western will play their final home match of the 2013 season on Sunday, October 20 with a contest against the University of Nebraska-Kearney at 12:00 pm. The Griffons will honor four seniors before the game who include; Ashley Juravich, Raylin Garcia, Alexa Adams and Marissa Nolan.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Northwest volleyball falls at Central Oklahoma, 3-1

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State volleyball team fell to the Central Oklahoma Bronchos, 3-1, on Friday evening at Hamilton Field House in Edmond, Okla. The loss moves the Bearcats to 9-11 overall and 3-5 in MIAA play. Central Oklahoma improves to 15-5 and 5-3 in MIAA play.

The Bronchos won the first set, 25-13, and were able to hold off the Bearcats in the second set, 25-23. UCO won the third and final set, 25-19.

Shelby Duren had a team-high 10 kills for the Bearcats. Bridget Hanafin had 21 assists and 10 digs. Mackie Keller had two blocks defensively.

The Bearcats will travel to Kansas City for a non-MIAA match against Rockhurst University on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at 7 p.m.

— Northwest Sports Information —

Cardinals advance to World Series with 9-0 win over Dodgers

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Carlos Beltran, Michael Wacha and the St. Louis Cardinals are going to the World Series – not even Clayton Kershaw could stop them this year.

Beltran and the Cardinals stunned the Dodgers’ ace with a four-run third inning, Wacha was again magnificent on the mound and St. Louis advanced to its second World Series in three seasons by roughing up the Los Angeles Dodgers 9-0 in Game 6 of the NL championship series Friday night.

Wacha, a rookie, was selected MVP of the series after throwing 13 2-3 scoreless innings and beating Kershaw twice in the NLCS.

Matt Carpenter sparked St. Louis’ big third inning with a one-out double on the 11th pitch of his at-bat. Beltran singled him home and the Cardinals quickly removed all the suspense surrounding a team that squandered a 3-1 series lead in the NLCS last fall against San Francisco.

”I’m so happy right now. We did it as a team,” Beltran said. ”We fought hard, we worked hard all season long and thank god we’re here.”

Game 1 of the World Series is Wednesday at the winner of the ALCS between the Boston Red Sox and Detroit Tigers. The Cardinals won their 19th NL pennant and will be trying for their third title since 2006, last winning in 2011.

The glamorous Dodgers, with the second-highest payroll in baseball at $220 million, failed to reach the World Series for the first time since winning it all in 1988.

After losing Game 5 in Los Angeles, the Cardinals turned to Wacha once again. The right-hander was even better in outpitching Kershaw for the second time this series.

It was 52 degrees at game time, a 23-degree drop from the Kershaw-Wacha matchup in Game 2 six days earlier, and Kershaw never warmed up.

The top NL CY Young Award candidate was knocked out of a start for the first time this season without finishing the fifth.

Beltran had three hits and drove in two runs while facing Kershaw and made a spectacular catch in right field, helping him advance to the World Series for the first time in his 16-year career.

Perhaps showing the Cardinals weren’t stressed by the possibility of a second straight postseason meltdown, Games 1 and 5 starter Joe Kelly had a post-national anthem staredown against Dodgers reserve outfielder Scott Van Slyke that was broken up by a fed-up home plate umpire Greg Gibson after several minutes.

Kelly blinked first, all in good fun but, when it counted, St. Louis wouldn’t budge.

The Cardinals jumped on Kershaw in the third, batting around. After Wacha grounded out, Carpenter doubled in a gritty at-bat. Beltran singled him home for the game’s first run. With two outs, Yadier Molina added an RBI single, Shane Robinson drove in two runs with a single in his first career postseason start after replacing slumping Jon Jay – and advanced to second base on Dodgers rookie Yasiel Puig’s first of two errors in the Cardinals’ big innings.

The Cuban defector also struck out twice and was booed heartily. Hanley Ramirez, a last-minute addition to the Dodgers’ lineup, went 0 for 3 while playing with a broken rib.

Kershaw needed 48 pitches, the most pitches of his career in one inning, in the third. He took exception one pitch in particular, complaining to plate umpire Greg Gibson after Matt Adams’ full-count walk loaded the bases.

The Dodgers bench also was vocal after the call on a pitch that may have been an inch or two low of the strike zone.

The Cardinals knocked Kershaw out in a five-run fifth. Adams doubled in a run to chase Kershaw. Wacha drove in one with a fielder’s choice grounder and Carpenter had a sacrifice fly

Wacha has a minuscule 0.43 ERA in three postseason starts, one of the gems in Game 4 of the division series to keep the Cardinals alive. In his last regular season start and the NL Central up for grabs, he no-hit the Nationals for 8 2-3 innings.

”There’s not anything you can’t say about him,” Kelly said of Wacha. ”He’s just going out there and pitching his butt off right now and as you can see he’s just a pretty damn good pitcher.”

Beltran was the star of the Cardinals’ 3-2, 13-inning Game 1 victory, driving in all three runs plus making a throw to keep it tied in extra innings.

Kershaw was charged with seven runs on 10 hits in four-plus innings. The lefty led the majors in ERA the last three years but has lost five straight starts against St. Louis.

None of his starts this year were shorter than five innings and the most runs he allowed was five, on two occasions. The four-run fourth was his worst since July 24, 2012, at St. Louis, when Kershaw yielded eight runs in 5 2-3 innings.

The Dodgers didn’t have much of a chance again Wacha.

Carl Crawford led off the game with an infield hit but was erased on Mark Elllis’ double-play ball. A.J. Ellis doubled to start the sixth and didn’t advance.

— Associated Press —

Bearcats soccer plays to a 1-1 tie with Nebraska-Kearney

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State women’s soccer team played a hard fought game Friday against Nebraska-Kearney as they went into two overtimes and played to a 1-1 tie.

Both teams came out very aggressive trying to take an early lead.

UNK was able to get on the board first with a goal in the seventh minute to go up 1-0.

Elisabeth Lee did not wait long to knot the game up at 1-1 as she put in an unassisted goal in the 22nd minute.

The second half was a grudge match with both teams playing stellar defense and not allowing a clean shot on goal. The Lopers were able to outshoot the Bearcats in the second half, six to three.

Northwest managed only one shot in both overtime periods while UNK was able to get off five but could not find the back of the net as the game ended 1-1.

Kelsey Adams posted 10 saves in the contest. It is the second time this season Adams posted double-digit saves.

The tie pushes Northwest’s season record to 4-7-2, 2-4-1. The Bearcats will be right back at it Sunday as they play host to Fort Hays State with an early 11 a.m. kickoff as the team will honor their seniors at halftime.

— Northwest Sports Information —

Western soccer continues to struggle as they get blanked by Washburn

MWSUThe Missouri Western soccer team struggled on Wednesday evening in their make up game with Washburn as they allowed two second half goal and lost 2-0.

Western falls to 2-10-1 overall and 0-6 in the MIAA.  The Griffons are winless now in their last nine matches.

Missouri Western and Washburn had a slow start to the game with the two of them combining for just eight shots. The Griffons had just one shot coming from Sydney Andrews.

The Ichabods had seven shots with Bailey Wobin tacking three with one shot. Taylor Mayhew and Caysie Beetley both had two shots. Sarah Lyle had four saves in the frame.

Western continued to struggle in the second period of games giving up the game winning goal just three minutes into the half. Caysie Beetley put a header past goal keeper Sarah Lyle. Washburn put the finishing touches on the game in the 54th minute when Beetley found Bailey Wobig on a cross sealing the 2-0 victory.

Washburn improves to 7-5-1 on the season and 4-2-1 in MIAA play. WU had 15 shots with nine on goal. Mayhew had four shots on goal while Wobig had five shots with three on goal.

Missouri Western had five shots with Andrews taking two. Teddie Serna had the only shot on goal for MWSU.

The Griffons return to action on Friday, October 18 with a contest against the Fort Hays State Tigers. Game time is set for 7:00 pm from Spratt Stadium.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri picked to finish 5th in preseason SEC men’s basketball poll

riggertMizzouMissouri was pegged fifth in the 2014 Southeastern Conference preseason men’s basketball poll on Wednesday and junior guard Jabari Brown was selected as a Second Team Preseason All-SEC honoree by a panel of league and national media members.

Kentucky was the media’s preseason favorite to win the SEC and Wildcat freshman Julius Randle was selected as the league’s Preseason Player of the Year.

Brown is Mizzou’s lone returning starter from last season’s 23-11 campaign. The Oakland, Calif., native averaged 13.7 points and 3.4 rebounds and started the season’s final 23 games after becoming eligible following his transfer from Oregon. In SEC play, Brown was Missouri’s leading scorer (14.6 ppg) and ranked among league leaders in scoring (7th), free throw percentage (9th – .778) and three-point percentage (6th – .376) in conference games.

Overall the shooting guard topped 20 points five times in SEC action, including a career-high 23 points in wins at South Carolina and in the 2012-13 home finale vs. Arkansas. Missouri was 5-0 when Brown scored 20 points last season and the junior will help lead a new-look Tiger squad that begins exhibition play next Friday (Oct. 25) at Hearnes Center vs. Oklahoma City University.

That exhibition game is free to the public and Mizzou Athletics will recognize the undefeated 1993-94 Big Eight Championship squad.

Mizzou Head Coach Frank Haith and senior standout Earnest Ross are in Birmingham, Ala., at SEC Media Days today. The Tigers return to practice on Thursday following their Black & Gold Game scrimmage at Mizzou Arena on Oct. 15. Ross led all scorers with 24 points (including the game-winner) in the Mizzou Gold team victory.

2014 SEC Preseason Voting
First Team All-SEC
Trevor Releford – Alabama, G, 6-0, 190, Sr., Kansas City, Mo.
Julius Randle – Kentucky, F, 6-9, 250, Fr., Dallas, Texas
Johnny O’Bryant III – LSU, F , 6-9 , 256 , Jr. , Cleveland, Miss.
Marshall Henderson – Ole Miss, G, 6-2, 177, Sr., Hurst, Texas
Jordan McRae – Tennessee, G, 6-6, 185, Sr., Midway, Ga.

Second Team All-SEC
Jabari Brown – Missouri, G, 6-5, 214, Jr., Oakland, Calif.
Scottie Wilbekin – Florida, G, 6-2, 176, Sr., Gainesville, Fla.
Patric Young – Florida, C, 6-9, 240, Sr., Jacksonville, Fla.
Willie Cauley-Stein – Kentucky, F, 7-0, 244, So., Olathe, Kan.
Andrew Harrison – Kentucky, G, 6-6, 215, Fr., Richmond, Texas
Dakari Johnson – Kentucky, C, 7-0, 265, Fr., Brooklyn, N.Y.
Jeronne Maymon – Tennessee, F, 6-8, 260, Sr., Madison, Wis.
Jarnell Stokes – Tennessee, F, 6-8, 260, Jr., Memphis, Tenn.

SEC Player of the Year: Julius Randle, Kentucky

Preseason Media Poll     Pts
1.     Kentucky (21)     371
2.     Florida (5)     353
3.     Tennessee (1)     320
4.     LSU         270
5.     Missouri     262
6.     Alabama     257
7.     Ole Miss     216
8.     Arkansas     197
9.     Texas A&M     139
10.     Vanderbilt     125
11.     Georgia     119
12.     South Carolina     108
13.     Mississippi State     59
14.     Auburn     39
First-Place Votes in Parentheses

— MU Sports Information —

Cards drop Game 5 to Dodgers as NLCS shifts back to St. Louis

CardsLOS ANGELES (AP) — It took the Dodgers five games to hit a home run in the NL championship series. Once Adrian Gonzalez powered up for the first one, their dormant offense broke loose.

Gonzalez homered twice and Zack Greinke came through with the clutch performance Los Angeles needed in a 6-4 victory over the Cardinals on Wednesday that trimmed St. Louis’ lead to 3-2 in the best-of-seven playoff.

”Guys weren’t ready to lose today,” said Carl Crawford, who also went deep to help the Dodgers save their season.

Los Angeles held on in the ninth, when St. Louis scored twice off closer Kenley Jansen before he struck out pinch-hitter Adron Chambers with two on to end it.

The series shifts back to St. Louis for Game 6 on Friday night, with ace Clayton Kershaw scheduled to start for Los Angeles against rookie Michael Wacha.

When those two squared off in Game 2, the Cardinals won 1-0 on an unearned run.

”We’ve kind of become America’s team because everyone wants to see a seventh game,” Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said. ”Probably even the fans in St. Louis would like to see a seventh game, so I figure that everybody’s for us to win on Friday night.”

The Cardinals also led last year’s NLCS 3-1 before losing three straight games to the eventual World Series champion San Francisco Giants.

”We’re looking to do the same thing,” Gonzalez said.

Desperate to avoid elimination, the Dodgers brought in some Hollywood star power for pregame introductions. Will Ferrell announced their lineup and lent a comic spin to each player’s name, capping it by introducing Greinke as ”today’s winning pitcher.”

Ferrell knew what he was talking about.

Greinke got into a bases-loaded jam with none out in the first but escaped with no damage. From there, he pitched seven strong innings and even delivered an RBI single.

”That was big. I was real nervous out there with that situation,” Greinke said.

A.J. Ellis also homered at Dodger Stadium, where it is tougher to clear the fences in the heavy night air.

Helped by playing in 82-degree heat on a sunny afternoon, the Dodgers rediscovered their power stroke just in time to extend the series. They hit .274 in three games at home after batting .184 during the first two games in St. Louis.

”It was just one of those days that we were a little better, got some runs, good feeling,” Mattingly said.

The Dodgers regrouped after Greinke squandered an early 2-0 lead just as he did in Game 1, which Los Angeles lost 3-2 in 13 innings on the road.

After neither team homered in the first three games for the first time in NLCS history, the big bats came out. The Cardinals used a two-run homer by Matt Holliday and a solo shot from pinch-hitter Shane Robinson to win 4-2 on Tuesday night.

This time, Gonzalez went 3 for 4 with two solo homers and three runs scored. His two-out shot in the eighth made it 6-2.

”We have a team that can bounce back and do some pretty incredible things out there,” he said.

The Cardinals tied it at 2 in the third on Carlos Beltran’s RBI triple and Holliday’s run-scoring double before Yadier Molina grounded into his second inning-ending double play against Greinke.

”He wasn’t as sharp as he was the first time we faced him,” Beltran said. ”But guys like that, the best guys in the game, they’re able to regroup and find a way to help their team win.”

Los Angeles answered in the bottom of the third. Mark Ellis singled leading off but was erased when Hanley Ramirez grounded into a double play.

Gonzalez followed with the Dodgers’ first homer of the NLCS, slugging the ball an estimated 428 feet into the right-field pavilion for a 3-2 lead.

As he headed toward the dugout, Gonzalez cupped his hands to his ears and wiggled them in a gesture resembling mouse ears. It was an apparent jab at Cardinals pitcher Adam Wainwright, who said Gonzalez had done ”some Mickey Mouse stuff” in celebrating a double on Monday night.

”It’s just having fun,” Gonzalez said. ”I’m going to retire them so they’re not talked about once again.”

Crawford egged Gonzalez on.

”I’m pretty sure it rubbed them the wrong way and they’re going to use that as some kind of fuel, so you might as well keep doing it,” Crawford said, laughing.

Gonzalez replied: ”Hey, if Carl wants them. It’s for him, not for anybody else.”

After wriggling out of big trouble in the first when Molina bounced into a double play, Greinke allowed two runs and six hits. He struck out four and walked one.

”He made his pitches, we made the plays, got out of it,” Gonzalez said. ”We were able to get run support for him. All he needed was a few runs.”

Jansen gave up RBI singles to Matt Adams and Pete Kozma in the ninth.

A.J. Ellis homered in seventh, sending an 0-2 pitch from Edward Mujica into the left-field pavilion to make it 5-2.

Crawford homered with one out in the fifth, extending the Dodgers’ lead to 4-2. He walloped a 3-2 pitch from starter Joe Kelly an estimated 447 feet into the right-field pavilion.

Kelly gave up four runs and seven hits in five innings. He struck out three and walked none.

”I made a few bad pitches on heaters and didn’t locate that well, and they turned into home runs,” he said. ”With guys on base, I was going after them and attacking them with the fastball, but they’re good hitters and they put good swings on them and hit them out of the park.”

Beltran’s triple went over the head of Andre Ethier and to the wall in center, scoring Matt Carpenter, who singled. Holliday followed with a double to deep center, but that was it for St. Louis until the ninth.

”We had a couple of opportunities to do something, and we just couldn’t make it happen,” manager Mike Matheny said. ”These guys have done a tremendous job in those exact same situations all season long. You’re going to have games where you just can’t make it happen, and we’ve got to figure out a way to get it done the next time we get a chance.”

— Associated Press —

Griffons extend win streak to five with sweep of William Jewell

MWSUThe Missouri Western volleyball team won its fifth straight match after the Griffons swept William Jewell 3-0 Tuesday night at MWSU Fieldhouse.

Western jumped out to a 9-5 lead after Amanda Boender recorded a kill. Minutes later, the Cardinals came back to tie the match take a slim, 17-16 lead.

Boender added two points to take the lead back. The match settled at 20 apiece before the Griffons pulled out the set 25-22 thanks to Holly Pollock’s kill.

The second set proved to be Missouri Western’s best set.

Missouri Western’s lead quickly expanded to 11-5 after Erica Rottinghaus’ attack added another kill by the junior. The Griffons doubled William Jewell’s points at 18-9 and 22-11.

The Griffons closed the set 25-12 to take a 2-0 lead.

In the final set, the Cardinals fell behind 9-3 but scored 8 of the next 13 points to pull within two. It took a while for the Cardinals to tie the set, but they finally did at 19. The set went back and fourth until was tied a 22.

Rottinghaus closed the show as Kelly Scannell set up her final kill of the match to take the 25-22 win and a 3-0 victory.

Scannell led th team with 39 assists in the 3-set match. Boender and Rottinghaus both had 13 kills to tie for the team high. Rottinghaus also led the team with 14 digs.

The Griffons return to action this weekend for an MIAA match against Central Oklahoma at 7 p.m. on Saturday.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Benedictine picked 4th in preseason HAAC men’s basketball poll

BCThe Heart of America Athletic Confernece (HAAC) held its annual basketball media day on Tuesday at the NAIA Headquarters in downtown Kansas City and the Raven men’s basketball team was selected as the preseason No. 4 team.

Benedictine went 10-8 in the HAAC a year ago and finished with an overall record of 18-12 under second-year head coach Ryan Moody.

After waiting his chance to speak to the those in attendance, Coach Moody was very humbled by his fellow coaches and the athletes who represent the conference.

“When you start to look at the some of the things in the HAAC media guide, there’s a lot of humbling numbers in there,” Coach Moody said. “The first thing you see is all of the wins that some of these (coaches) have in their bios and that’s very humbling. The second thing you see is the type of players that many of these (coaches) continue to bring in, they are very talented and there are a lot of character athletes that have been brought it and that’s very humbling.”

With three teams qualifiying for the NAIA Div. I tournament routinely since making the jump from NAIA Div. II, one might expect the HAAC coaches to split their first-place votes among the three schools who qualified for nationals last year. While Evangel, the preseason favorite, earned seven first-place votes and MNU, the preseason No. 2, earned two first-place votes, the final first-place vote did not go to preseason No. 3 Culver-Stockton, it went to Benedictine.

The Ravens return all but one player from last season with 70 percent of their scoring from last year coming from players who are now sophomores and juniors.

“We return essentially our entire team,” Coach Moody said. “That leaves a lot of room for optimism and we’re excited to be back at it. We’ll be led by three seniors and we’re going to lean on those guys pretty heavily.”

Senior forward Charlie Wallrapp was a second-team All-HAAC selection a year ago and senior forward Steven O’Brien was one of the top reserves last year. Guard Herb Khangura is the third senior on the squad and is expected to push for minutes at the point this season after sitting out last year.

“Having that much scoring coming back is a positive thing,” Coach Moody said. “But we’ve talked with our guys a lot, and I they believe it, that  one year older doesn’t mean you’re one year better. We’re going to have to continue to work hard because this (conference) has too many good coaches and there are too many good players in this league.

“We’re excited to see how things are going to be, we’re movitivated and ready to compete.”

Benedictine opens their 13 game home schedule on Nov. 1 when they host Tabor College at 7 p.m.

— BC Sports Information —

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