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Cards come up short at Pittsburgh, fall behind 2-1 in NLDS

CardsPITTSBURGH (AP) — Pinch-runner Josh Harrison stood on second base in the bottom of the eighth inning and pointed to Pittsburgh Pirates third base coach Nick Leyva.

”I told him to get that arm ready, because I’m coming,” Harrison said.

Moments later, Harrison was streaking across home plate to give the Pirates the lead. Minutes after that, the Jolly Roger that’s been a fixture on the Pittsburgh skyline all summer climbed up the flagpole again.

Harrison scored on Pedro Alvarez’s tiebreaking single Sunday, sending the Pirates to a 5-3 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals that staked Pittsburgh to a 2-1 lead in the best-of-five NL division series.

Russell Martin followed with a sharp RBI single against reliever Kevin Siegrist, who took over after Carlos Martinez (0-1) faltered.

The go-ahead single was the latest big hit by Alvarez. He homered in the first two games against St. Louis and is 4 for 10 with four RBIs in the series.

Alvarez also kept the Pirates’ famous flag flying high in October. ”Raise the Jolly Roger!” is the rallying cry for this wild-card team, now one victory from its first postseason series win since Willie Stargell, Dave Parker and the ”We Are Family” gang won it all in 1979.

”We’re continuing to surprise a lot of people, I believe. We’re continuing to show people that we’re not done, that we’re not just happy to be in the postseason,” star center fielder Andrew McCutchen said. ”We’re fighting to win a World Series.”

Heady territory for a franchise that had endured a record 20 consecutive years of losing coming into this season. Six months later, the Pirates are on the cusp of knocking out baseball royalty.

Mark Melancon (1-0) picked up the win despite allowing Carlos Beltran’s tying home run in the top of the eighth. Jason Grilli worked the ninth for a save.

Charlie Morton is set to start for Pittsburgh in Game 4 on Monday against rookie Michael Wacha.

Beltran finished 2 for 3 with three RBIs. His 16th playoff home run moved him past Babe Ruth for eighth place in postseason history.

”It’s a must-win tomorrow for us,” Beltran said. ”Hopefully we can come here tomorrow, take care of business, win and go play the last game at home.”

Beltran’s shot temporarily silenced a rocking crowd at PNC Park. It also set the stage for another dramatic win by the Pirates.

McCutchen led off the eighth with his second hit, a double to left. But the NL MVP candidate unwisely tried to advance on Justin Morneau’s grounder to shortstop and was an easy out at third.

Harrison ran for Morneau and moved up when Marlon Byrd walked. St. Louis manager Mike Matheny turned to a lefty in Siegrist to face the left-handed Alvarez. The Pittsburgh slugger tied for the NL lead with 36 homers during the regular season, but hit just .180 against lefties.

”I just knew it was going to be a tough matchup,” Alvarez said. ”I’ve seen him a couple of times before. I haven’t had much success. He’s a pitcher with good stuff – great stuff. He threw me a couple of fastballs out over the plate.”

One too many, as it turned out, and Alvarez singled between first and second. Martin then fouled off a squeeze bunt before lining a hit to left that gave Grilli more than enough cushion.

The game was a rare nail-biter between two clubs that spent the summer shadowing each other in the race for the NL Central title. Coming into Sunday, only five of the previous 21 matchups between the two were decided by two runs or less.

After blowouts by each club in St. Louis, there wasn’t much room to breathe in front of a frenzied, black-clad crowd looking for a repeat of Pittsburgh’s giddy 6-2 romp over Cincinnati in the wild-card game last Tuesday.

Martin’s sacrifice fly off reliever Seth Maness in the sixth gave the Pirates a 3-2 lead and turned the game over to Pittsburgh’s ”Shark Tank” bullpen, one of the keys to the franchise’s first winning season and playoff berth in a generation.

Tony Watson worked around a one-out single in the seventh before giving way to Melancon.

The Cardinals must win two straight to advance to the NL championship series for the third straight year.

”We’ve been in this situation,” Beltran said. ”Last year, I think we were in this situation a lot. So I think we’re fine, man. We want to come here tomorrow, we want to win and hopefully take this series home.”

Pirates starter Francisco Liriano dominated the Cardinals during the regular season, going 3-0 with an 0.75 ERA in three starts against the NL’s highest-scoring team. He was electric against the Reds last Tuesday, shaking off a sinus infection and baffling them with a series of changeups and sliders that ended Cincinnati’s season and manager Dusty Baker’s tenure.

Liriano narrowly escaped damage in the third Sunday when Matt Holliday lined to right with the bases loaded.

The left-hander wasn’t quite as fortunate in the fifth. Jon Jay led off with a single and Pete Kozma followed with a walk. After pitcher Joe Kelly struck out trying to bunt, a double steal set up Beltran’s two-run single.

At 2-all, the Cardinals had matched their entire output against Liriano in their previous 28 innings.

Liriano was matched nearly pitch for pitch by the unflappable Kelly. The 25-year-old right-hander has been rock-steady all season, even as he moved from middle reliever to starter in July.

Kelly welcomed the hostile environment, calling the sea of black-clad fans that awaited him one of the things a kid dreams about.

The reality proved a little more unnerving, at least when Byrd hit a two-run single in the first.

The well-traveled outfielder – who played in 1,250 regular-season games before reaching the playoffs for the first time – has been a welcome jolt both in the lineup and in the clubhouse for the Pirates.

”Just having a heck of a time,” Byrd said.

— Associated Press —

Harvick wins from the pole at Kansas Speedway

UntitledKANSAS CITY, Kan. — Kevin Harvick didn’t simply have his hands full with the rest of the Sprint Cup field Sunday. He also was trying to tame a squirrely surface at Kansas Speedway.

He handled both better than anybody else.

Harvick pulled away from Kurt Busch and Jeff Gordon on a late restart to win a wreck-filled race over the recently repaved track, keeping his No. 29 Chevrolet out of trouble all afternoon and making a big move in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship.

“It was an interesting weekend, to say the least,” said Harvick, who moved into third in points behind leaders Matt Kenseth and Jimmie Johnson. “Everybody was battling the tires and the track, and I think it was like driving on a razor blade.”

Harvick sat on the pole for the first time in 254 races, and that should have given him some confidence. He also won the last time he qualified first, at New Hampshire in 2006.

“These guys just did a great job all weekend,” Harvick said. “To have a car fast enough for me to qualify on the pole says a lot about how fast this thing is.”

Harvick was chased across the line by Busch and Gordon. Joey Logano finished fourth, Carl Edwards was fifth, and Johnson finished sixth despite a hiccup with his engine on the final lap that cost him a spot on the track.

Kenseth held onto his lead in the Chase with an 11th-place finish. Johnson narrowed the gap to three points, while Harvick closed to within 25 points heading to Charlotte.

“We just got to keep doing what we did today to be a contender,” said his car owner, Richard Childress. “I don’t think top 10s will win a championship when you’re racing Jimmie Johnson and the group of guys that are up there.”

Kyle Busch was the big loser after crashing out of his third straight Sprint Cup race at Kansas. He dropped from third in points to fifth, 35 out of first place.

“All-in-all just a crazy day,” said Johnson, who shaved five points off of Kenseth’s lead. “Wacky restarts, a lot of chaos there, and caution after caution for who knows what.”

There were 15 cautions in the race, breaking the record of 14 set in last year’s race. The first came when the race wasn’t even a lap old and Danica Patrick slammed into the wall, and most of them occurred when cars got loose coming out of Turn 2.

Kenseth both called the race “treacherous,” pointing to the combination of a repave last year and Goodyear’s new “multi-zone” tires that made it seem as if they were skating across a smooth, glasslike surface most of the afternoon. All of it was compounded by temperatures in the 50s at the start, more than 30 degrees cooler than practice earlier in the week.

“It’s all about restarts and making sure you can gain spots, but it’s treacherous,” Kurt Busch said. “You had to have a lot of give and take.”

One of the intriguing story lines coming into the race involved Chase contender Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski, who got together in the Nationwide race Saturday.

Keselowski said that Busch intentionally dumped him and seemed to indicate he would retaliate in the Sprint Cup race. Keselowski even asked NASCAR president Mike Helton in the prerace driver’s meeting about the line between hard racing and intentional wrecks.

It turned out that Busch kept going for spins without Keselowski’s help.

The first one came down the front stretch when he appeared to squeeze Juan Pablo Montoya, sending Busch sideways across the track. The second spin came after a restart a moment later, and this one sent his No. 18 Toyota head-first into the Turn 1 wall and ended his day.

“I have no idea what happened, but it’s Kansas. It’s what we do here, we just crash,” Busch said. “The racetrack is the worst racetrack I’ve ever driven on. The tires are the worst tires I’ve ever driven on, and track position is everything. You can’t do anything.”

Harvick didn’t seem to have a whole lot of trouble with track, or the tires.

He was fast from the moment he unloaded this weekend, and then turned heads with his fast qualifying run. Harvick got off pit sequence early in the race and was shuffled to the back of the pack, but he was fast every time he got into clean air.

That was the case at the end, when he pulled away for an easy victory.

“The car was just really tight and then we got better as the cloud cover came over and we found that middle line,” Harvick said. “Track position was so important. It was a good day, and just happy as heck for everybody on this team.”

— Associated Press —

No. 6 Griffons stay unbeaten with 63-30 win at Central Oklahoma

MWSUSixth ranked Missouri Western outscored Central Oklahoma in every quarter as the Grirffons defeated the Bronchos 63-30 and won their eighth straight conference game Saturday night. With the win the Griffons improve to 5-0 (4-0 MIAA).

Just like the week prior, the Griffons fell behind 7-0 after the first drive. Bronchos’ running back Adrian Nelson dove into the end zone on a 1-yard run to take a one-touchdown lead with 12:49 to play. Five minutes later, the Griffons tied the game.

Travis Partridge rushed for his first of four touchdowns on the night to tie the game. Partridge’s four rushing scores was one shy of the single-game record. Dalton Krysa gave the Griffons the lead on their next drive after his 13-yard scamper moved Missouri Western to a 14-7 lead. The score came just 38 seconds after the Griffons tied the game thanks to Austin Baska’s interception.

Nelson shook off his early turnover and scored on a 7-yard run to tie the game at 14. Raphael Spencer sped in for an 11-yard score minutes later to end the first quarter with the Griffons ahead 21-14.

After a Broncho field goal from kicker Seth Hiddink, Krysa dove inside for a 1-yard score to put the Girffons ahead 28-17. The first touchdown that wasn’t on the ground came with 10 seconds to play in the half. Partridge found Josh Walker in the end zone on a 7-yard pass as Missouri Western went into halftime with a 35-17 lead.

In the third quarter, Partridge broke open the game even more with another touchdown run. Central Oklahoma answered with two more field goals to bring the game to 42-23.

Two more touchdowns runs by Partridge were intertwined with two return touchdowns as the game continued in the fourth quarter.

Marquez Clark’s 60-yarder came after Partridge ran a 5-yard touchdown to mark the game 49-30.

Partridge added his fourth score on a 1-yarder followed by Derek Libby’s 79-yard punt return to end the game with the Griffons winning 63-30. It was the second time this season the Griffons put up 63 points. The Griffons defeated Missouri S&T on Sept. 14 63-3.

In the past four weeks, the Griffons have averaged just more than 52 points compared to giving up just 18.

Partridge finished 17 of 27 with 203 yards and one touchdown and one interception. He also had 39 yards on the ground to go with his four rushing touchdowns. Spencer finished with 221 yards on the ground on 24 attempts for a 9.2 yards per carry average. Spencer also led the team with four catches for 41 yards.

Krysa added nine carries for 51 yards and his two touchdowns.

The Griffons continue MIAA play next week at Spratt Stadium against Northeastern State. Kickoff is set for 1:30 p.m as the Griffons take on the RiverHawks in their homecoming matchup.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Third-ranked Northwest cruises past Northeastern State, 40-12

Northwest2013riggertThe third-ranked Northwest Missouri State football team improved to 5-0 on the season and 4-0 in MIAA play with a 40-12 victory over Northeastern State on Saturday afternoon at Doc Wadley Stadium in Tahlequah, Okla. NSU drops to 0-5 overall and in conference play.

Senior quarterback Trevor Adams passed for 212 yards and two scores, completing 11 of 16 attempts. Sophomore Brady Bolles had 134 yards passing and a touchdown, going 10-for-12. Northwest’s defense held the RiverHawks to just 244 total yards. Despite not forcing a turnover on the day, the Bearcats allowed just 3.7 yards per play and held NSU to just six third down conversions on 15 tries. Eric Reimer led the defense with 10 total tackles.

The game was delayed approximately an hour due to lightning in the area.

Northwest got on the board first, scoring on a 24 yard run from Phil Jackson II midway through the first. On the next possession, Adams hooked up with Jason Jozaites for a 52 yard pass, putting Northwest up, 14-0.

In the second quarter, Adams found Marcus Wright down the sideline for a 40 yard pass. Wright made a quick move inside and broke free for the score. With 5:36 remaining in the half, Ben Trewyn hit a 28 yard field goal, giving Northwest a 24-0 lead.

On the ensuing possession, Northeastern State took the ball 91 yards in eight plays, ending in a 12 yard pass from Cory Meaders to Tank Richmond. On the point-after attempt, Northwest blocked the kick and Brian Dixon returned it down the right sideline for two points.

With time winding down in the first half, the Bearcats put together an 11-play, 75-yard scoring drive. Billy Creason scored from six yards out with just 36 seconds remaining, sending Northwest into the locker rooms with a 33-6 lead.

Northwest’s lone score of the second half took place on the opening drive of the third quarter. The Bearcats went 65 yards on 12 plays, resulting in a five-yard touchdown pass from Bolles to Korey Jackson.

Northwest will host Central Oklahoma on Saturday, Oct. 12, at Bearcat Stadium at 1 p.m.

— Northwest Sports Information —

MWSU volleyball gets swept at Southwest Baptist

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western volleyball team dropped three straight sets in their loss to Southwest Baptist Saturday evening.

The loss comes one day after the Griffons defeated Missouri Southern on the road in five sets. The Griffons sit at 4-3 in the conference and 6-10 overall.

After dropping the first two games 25-17, the Griffons came close to claiming set three. After a back-and-fourth match, the two teams set tied at 10 before the Griffons pulled out three straight points. Baptist came back and took a 21-19 lead later on in the set. After a kill by Kelly Scannell and two straight by Kelsey Olion, the Griffons again took the lead. They couldn’t hold on, however, and the Bearcats took the final set 26-24 and grabbed the win.

Erin Backhuus led the team with nine kills. Olion was right behind her with eight. Scannell had a team-high 23 assists. The team had 66 total digs, with Erica Rottinghaus producing 15 for a team high.

Baptist improves to 10-5 and 3-3 in the conference. Missouri Western returns to action Tuesday night against Emporia. The match will start at 7 p.m. at MWSU Fieldhouse.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Kansas State’s upset bid comes up short at No. 21 Oklahoma State

KSUSTILLWATER, Okla. (AP) — Mike Gundy was just as baffled as everyone else watching Oklahoma State’s offensive struggles for much of the second half against Kansas State.

The Cowboys’ coach, however, wasn’t about to complain about the late burst that led to a 33-29 win over the Wildcats on Saturday.

Led by J.W. Walsh’s 6-yard touchdown pass to Charlie Moore with 4:13 remaining in the fourth quarter, No. 21 Oklahoma State (4-1, 1-1 Big 12 Conference) narrowly avoided its second straight loss and remained in the thick of the conference race.

The Cowboys fell behind 29-23 late in the fourth quarter. A six-play, 75-yard scoring drive – engineered by Walsh – came only after the Cowboys had fallen behind and watched as several scoring opportunities resulted in only field goals.

Afterward, Gundy had one wish looking back on the go-ahead drive.

”Whoever flipped the switch, I wish they’d flip it earlier,” Gundy said. ”I don’t know what to say. It was very well executed; guys made plays.”

While Oklahoma State breathed a sigh of relief, Kansas State was left to once again ponder what might have been – despite the emergence of Daniel Sams at quarterback.

Sams, who had attempted only four passes entering the game this season, accounted for 299 yards of total offense and three touchdowns for the Wildcats (2-3, 0-2). However, he also threw three interceptions – two of which came on Kansas State’s last two drives – and lost a fumble as the Wildcats lost their second straight game.

Sams entered the game having shared time with Jake Waters at quarterback this season. The sophomore played the majority of the game on Saturday, finishing 15-of-21 passing for 181 yards and a pair of touchdowns, and he had 118 yards rushing on 27 carries.

The effort was nearly enough to help the Wildcats overcome 12 penalties for 92 yards.

”We started him because we were trying to do some things that we knew he could do, and get him invested collectively in the ballgame,” Kansas State coach Billy Snyder said. ”As you can see, he came in and threw the ball just fine. I certainly don’t like the interceptions.”

Oklahoma State led 17-14 at halftime thanks to a 3-yard touchdown run in the second quarter by Walsh, who bounced back from a two-interception performance last week in a loss to West Virginia.

The sophomore’s best moment came following Sams’ 3-yard touchdown that put Kansas State up 29-23 in the fourth quarter.

Following the score, Walsh opened the Cowboys’ drive with completions of 12 and 26 yards to Josh Stewart and Tracy Moore, respectively. After a 16-yard run by Jeremy Smith, Walsh added a 15-yard strike to Brandon Sheperd before capping the go-ahead drive with his touchdown pass to Charlie Moore.

”It was one of those situations where the guys on the field knew we had to go down and score, and if we didn’t, we may not win,” Walsh said. ”We knew we had to take care of the ball and go score.

”We just put the ball in our playmakers’ hands. When we do that, good things happen.”

Oklahoma State’s Shaun Lewis and Daytawion Lowe followed with interceptions to end the Wildcats’ final two drives and secure the win.

Sams put Kansas State up 7-0 in the first quarter with a 67-yard touchdown pass to Glenn Gronkowski, a play on which he faked the run before pulling up and slinging the ball over the middle to the streaking fullback.

The sophomore also found Torell Miller for a 17-yard touchdown pass to put the Wildcats up 21-17 to open the third quarter.

After falling behind, the Cowboys forced turnovers on each of Kansas State’s next three possessions. They were only able to come away with a pair of field goals by Ben Grogan, however.

The freshman kicker, who missed a pair of field goals in the loss to the Mountaineers, connected from 30, 34, 23 and 28 yards out on Saturday.

Despite the turnaround in the kicking game, Gundy had no answers for an Oklahoma State offense that had no first downs in the third quarter.

”I don’t have a clue,” Gundy said. ”I really wish I could give you an explanation so it sounds good on the news tonight.

”We need to become a better football team from the 7-yard line in. That’s a fact.”

Luckily for the Cowboys, Walsh had the answer when they needed it the most.

— Associated Press —

Jayhawks give up 54 straight points and lose big to Texas Tech

KULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — How costly Texas Tech’s 54-16 victory over Kansas is going to be is not yet known.

Minutes after the No. 20 Red Raiders scored 54 straight points to swamp the hapless Jayhawks and remain unbeaten, coach Kliff Kingsbury said he could not be sure how badly quarterback Baker Mayfield was hurt. The true freshman had already passed for 368 yards when he was helped off the field with just seconds to go in the third quarter.

Mayfield has started every game for the Red Raiders (5-0, 2-0 Big 12) who are 5-0 for the first time since 2008 and possibly poised for a breakthrough season behind a true freshman walk-on.

”I just saw him limping off and he wasn’t putting much weight on that (right) leg,” said Kingsbury. ”I’ve got to talk to the docs and see.”

Mayfield was hurt when tackled while passing. There was no penalty. He hobbled very slowly off the field with someone helping him under each arm.

He was 33 of 51 with one interception.

With Mayfield in command after Kansas took a 10-0 lead, the Red Raiders surged, and went to 14-1 all-time against the Jayhawks (2-2, 0-1).

Kansas lost its 22nd straight Big 12 game.

”I thought Baker settled in and started finding guys,” Kingsbury said. ”The O-line played good the whole day.”

Kansas coach Charlie Weis said the Red Raiders didn’t change anything to ignite their offense.

”No, they didn’t. And that’s what bothers you the most,” Weis said.

Backup Davis Webb threw a 25-yard touchdown pass to Eric Ward and a 4-yard scoring pass to Dylan Cantrell. The Red Raiders also scored twice on short runs by DeAndre Washington while rolling up 518 total yards on an exhausting 100 plays.

The turning point may have come with about 5 minutes left in the second quarter when the score was tied 10-all and Kansas punter Trevor Pardula, facing a fourth-and-12 from the Kansas 17, fielded the snap but took off running. The junior kicker, who two weeks earlier averaged a school-record 57.6 yards on five punts, was tackled on the 16 and a moment later Mayfield scored on a 19-yard quarterback draw.

”It was based on whether something happens, you have to take it,” Weis said. ”And he kind of got caught in that gray area. In hindsight, he wouldn’t do it. But if he had a certain look, he was able to do that.”

Eric Ward caught seven balls for 122 yards, tight end Jace Amaro caught nine for 96 and Jakeem Grant added seven catches for 92 yards for Tech.

”There was one drive we probably ran zone about six times in a row,” Washington said. ”We were able to get eight to 10 yards a carry. A lot of inside plays worked for us today.”

Ryan Bustin kicked four field goals for the Red Raiders, making him 13 for 15 in five games.

Tech tied it 10-all on Kenny Williams’ 1-yard run midway through the second quarter on a 42-yard drive aided by two key Kansas penalties. A roughing-the-passer infraction on defensive end Kevin Young gave Tech a first down on the 14,ans then Dexter McDonald was flagged for pass interference in the end zone.

Bustin made a 23-yarder to get the Red Raiders going in the second. He also had a 25-yarder as time ran out in the second quarter, giving Texas Tech a 20-10 halftime lead. In each instance, the Red Raiders failed to reach the end zone after driving to first-and-goal from inside the 10. Tech had a first down on the 8 but JaCorey Shepherd broke up Mayfield’s third-down pass in the end zone.

Mayfield connected for two long gainers in the final minutes of the half, giving Tech a first down on the Kansas 2. But three straight running plays lost 2 yards and Bustin was called in to kick his second field goal.

The Jayhawks seized a 10-0 homecoming lead in the first quarter on a 36-yard field goal by Matthew Wyman and Jake Heaps’ 25-yard TD pass to Jimmay Mundine. It was the first points the Jayhawks had scored in the first quarter all year and the first time the Red Raiders trailed.

On the 79-yard touchdown drive, the Jayhawks were flagged five yards for false starts on back-to-back plays, resulting in a third-and-12 from the 50. But Heaps hit Tony Pierson for a 25-yard gain and then connected with Mundine on the next play.

Mike Cummings had a 28-yard TD pass to Andrew Turzilli late.

— Associated Press —

Abdullah leads Nebraska to win over Illinois in Big Ten opener

NULINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Ameer Abdullah ran for a career-high 225 yards and two touchdowns and Nebraska’s maligned defense was much improved in a 39-19 victory over Illinois on Saturday.

Tommy Armstrong, starting his second straight game in place of injured quarterback Taylor Martinez, led the Cornhuskers (4-1, 1-0 Big Ten) to touchdowns on his first three series and was solid throughout.

Armstrong was 8 of 13 for 135 yards.

Just as big as Armstrong’s performance was that of Nebraska’s defense, which had been one of the nation’s worst through four games.

Illinois (3-2, 0-1), which came in averaging 40 points a game, didn’t score its first touchdown until the middle of the third quarter. Twice when the Illini looked as if they would make a game of it, the Huskers made big stops.

Josh Ferguson led the Illini with 114 yards on 19 carries and another 82 yards on eight catches.

— Associated Press —

High School Football Scores – Friday, October 4

riggertFootballWEEK 6
CITY
Raymore-Peculiar 17, Central 12

Lafayette 62, Chillicothe 28

Maryville 36, Benton 6

Smithville 29, Bishop LeBlond 14

AREA
MEC
Savannah 25, Cameron 19 OT

KCI
East Buchanan 48, Lawson 14

Mid-Buchanan 16, Plattsburg 0 Halftime PPD until Sat. at 5 PM

Hamilton 39, West Platte 31

Lathrop 59, North Platte 8

GRC
Maysville 26, Polo 22

South Harrison 44, Braymer 6

Albany 27, Princeton 14

Gallatin 46, King City 12

8-MAN
275
Mound City 54, Craig/Fairfax 12

Rock Port 52, South Holt 6

Stanberry 57, Tarkio 8

West Nodaway 60, North Nodaway 32

Worth County 64, Nodaway-Holt 36

PVC
Stewartsville 22, DeKalb 20

North Andrew 8, Union Star 0

Southwest Livingston 52, South Nodaway 0

MWSU volleyball wins five-set match at Missouri Southern

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western volleyball team picked up a thrilling five set victory over the Missouri Southern Lions on Friday evening. The Griffons had three players in double digit kills with Erica Rottinghaus leading the way tying her season best 18 kills. The Griffons improve to 6-9 overall and 4-2 in MIAA play.

The Griffons opened up the the match on fire winning the first set 25-15. The Griffons had 12 kills in the set hitting .240. In set two the Lions took control early evening the set at one with a 25-18 victory.

In set three thre Griffons looked to be in command taking a 20-13 lead. The Lions stormed back but the Griffons were able to get the 31-29 victory taking a 2-1 lead in the match. Once again the Lions battled back eaving the match at two after a 25-23 victory in set four.

In the fifth and deciding set the Griffons took command early cruising to a 15-6 victory. Jessie Thorup and Kelsey Olion both had 12 kills while Jordan Chohon had 28 set assists. Sarah Faubel had 23 digs while Holley Pollock picthed in 10.

The Lions fall to 3-10 overall and 0-5 in MIAA play. Katie Politte had 17 kills while Abby Finder had 38 set assists. Sydney Wheeler and Politte both had 13 digs in the match.

The Griffons return to action on Saturday, October 5 with a 6:00 pm against Southwest Baptist in Bolivar, Mo.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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