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Missouri Western women’s golfers finish 8th at Lake Elmo Invite

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western women’s golf team was able to move up one spot on the final day of the Holiday Inn & Suites Lake Elmo Invite to finish 8th out of 15 teams. The Griffons fired a two round total of 687 (341-346) which was one stroke better than SW Minnesota State’s 688 (343-345). The winner of the event was Central Oklahoma with a 608 (301-307). The event was played at the par 72 (6019) Tartan Park Golf Course.

Griffon freshman Maidson Romjue led the way finishing in a tie for 36th with a two day total of 169 (88-81). Callie Wilson was one stroke behind Romjue with a 170 (82-88) while Shelby Stone finished with a 172 (84-88). Amber Chivington and Darcy Smith fired 176 (87-89) and 187 (93-94) respectively while Anna Kloeppel played as an individual firing 173 (80-93).

The winner of the event was Bethany Darrough of Central Oklahoma with a 146 (73-73) which was five strokes better than teammate Taylor Neidy who fired 151 (75-76).

The Griffons return to actio on Saturday, September 21 and Sunday, September 22 when they participate in the Southwest Minnesota STate University Mustang Invitational. The event will be played in Marshall, Minn. at the Marshall Golf Course.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Kansas City signs free agent TE Kevin Brock

ChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Monday that the club has signed free agent tight end Kevin Brock.

Brock (6-5, 249) 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). He has played in two games, both with the Bills in 2011, recording two receptions for 27 yards (13.5 avg.).

Since entering the NFL, Brock has primarily served as a practice squad member. The Hackensack, N.J., native, played tight end at Rutgers. He prepped at Hackensack High School in his hometown.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

St. Louis drops opening game at Colorado

CardsTodd Helton began his farewell tour in familiar style – by getting a big hit for the Colorado Rockies.

Helton started his final homestand with a key single in the eighth inning that helped the Rockies beat the St. Louis Cardinals 6-2 on Monday night.

Charlie Blackmon had three hits and drove in three runs for the Rockies, who prevented the Cardinals from taking over sole possession of first place in the NL Central. They remained tied with the Pittsburgh Pirates, who lost 2-0 to San Diego.

”We are aware of where we are,” St. Louis outfielder Matt Holliday said.

Matt Carpenter and Matt Adams had two hits each for the Cardinals.

Helton was playing in front of Colorado fans for the first time since he announced his plans to retire at the end of the season, his 17th. He went public Saturday when the Rockies were in Arizona, and Monday afternoon the team held a formal press conference.

Helton talked about his future without baseball during the day, but he was all business during the game.

He received a standing ovation when he came to the plate in the first, and Cardinals starter Lance Lynn stood behind the mound and waited as the crowd saluted Helton.

The first baseman was given a loud ovation in each of his four plate appearances. His night started slow, but he had a big hit during the decisive rally.

Troy Tulowitzki led off with a walk against reliever Trevor Rosenthal (2-4), and one out later Helton singled to center to put runners at the corners. Wilin Rosario singled to give Colorado a 3-2 lead.

”Todd had a huge hit. That was a huge hit in that inning,” Rockies manager Walt Weiss said. ”I don’t expect anything different. I think he’s going to have a huge homestand.”

Helton was caught in a rundown between third and home for the second out, but Blackmon doubled to right to score Josh Rutledge from first to make it 4-2.

Pinch-hitter Ryan Wheeler’s two-run single off John Axford gave the Rockies a 6-2 cushion.

”I had a pitch that could have been a double play and it turned out to be a flare into right field,” Axford said.

The four-run eighth was a rare misstep by the Cardinals’ bullpen.

”Overall our bullpen has been very, very good,” manager Mike Matheny said. ”They will bounce back.”

Collin McHugh started for Colorado in place of lefty Jorge De La Rosa, who has a sore thumb on his pitching hand that forced him to miss his turn in the rotation. McHugh allowed one run and four hits, with the only damage coming on David Freese’s RBI single in the fifth.

He left after throwing 75 pitches in five innings.

Lynn stuck around longer and got stronger as the game progressed. He scattered four hits through six innings and didn’t let a runner past first after Tulowitzki’s first-inning double before running into trouble in the seventh.

After Lynn retired Helton in a nine-pitch at-bat, Rosario singled and moved to third on Rutledge’s bloop single to right.

Left-hander Kevin Siegrist relieved Lynn, and Blackmon lined an RBI single over the pulled-in infield to give the Rockies a 2-1 lead.

”He throws really hard so I was trying to catch up to a fastball,” Blackmon said. ”I knew that was going to be a tough at-bat, just trying to battle from the start and get a good swing on it.”

The Cardinals tied it in the eighth on Carpenter’s RBI double off Chad Bettis (1-3) that scored pinch-runner Pete Kozma from second.

The Rockies took a 1-0 lead in the first on Tulowitzki’s RBI double.

— Associated Press —

Chiefs release safety Bradley McDougald

ChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Monday that the club has waived safety Bradley McDougald.

McDougald (6-1, 209) originally joined the Chiefs as a rookie free agent on May 1, 2013. He was active for one contest vs. Dallas on Sept. 15, but did not play. Prior to joining the Chiefs, McDougald played in 47 games (33 starts) seeing action on both sides of the ball at the University of Kansas.

He recorded 194 tackles (148 solo), 16 tackles for a loss, 2.0 sacks, six interceptions, three forced fumbles. He also had 52 catches for 558 yards (10.7 avg.) with one touchdown and six rushes for 31 yards. He prepped at Scioto High School in Columbus, Ohio.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Kansas State’s Daily named Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week

KSUKansas State defensive back Kip Daily was honored for his two-interception performance against Massachusetts as the senior has been named the Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week, the conference office announced Monday. It was Daily’s first career honor, while it marked the Wildcats’ Big 12-leading 20th weekly conference accolade since 2011.

Daily picked off his first-career pass in the first quarter and returned it 38 yards to open the game’s scoring. He also came back with a pick in the third quarter when the Minutemen were attempting to convert on fourth down inside K-State territory.

A product of College Station, Texas, Daily registered K-State’s first multi-interception game since Allen Chapman had three picks against Oklahoma State last season. Daily, who also had three tackles against UMass, tied for sixth in school history in single-game interceptions.

Kansas State hits the road for the first time in 2013 and opens Big 12 play in a nationally-televised contest at Texas Saturday night. The game, which will kick off at 7 p.m., from Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium, will be televised by ABC.

— KSU Sports Information —

MIAA hands out weekly football awards

riggertMIAALincoln’s Morris Henderson was named the MIAA Offensive Athlete of the Week and teammate Julio Segura named MIAA Special Teams Athlete of the Week. Northeastern State’s Langston Jones earned MIAA Defensive Athlete of the Week honors.

MIAA Offensive Athlete of the Week
Morris Henderson, RB, Lincoln

Henderson accounted for 325 all-purpose yards and three touchdowns as Lincoln defeated Division I FCS program Grambling State, 47-34, at Arrowhead Stadium on Saturday (Sept. 14). Henderson gained 137 yards on 11 carries in the win, losing just four yards on the ground all night. Henderson had rushing touchdowns of 41 and 44 yards, averaging 12.5 yards per carry. His third score came on a kickoff return, as he outran the GSU special teams unit for a 102-yard score in the second quarter. Finally, Henderson also made a big impact in the receiving game, catching three passes for 74 yards, including a 64-yard reception that led to another LU touchdown. The 5-9 senior runningback is a native of Jacksonville, Fla. where he competed at N.B. Forrest High School.

MIAA Defensive Athlete of the Week
Langston Jones, LB, Northeastern State

Northeastern State shutout Missouri Southern State in the second half, thanks in large part to a career-high 21 tackles from senior linebacker Langston Jones. Jones was all over the field, as the RiverHawks completely halted the Lions wishbone offense. MSSU punted on all six second-half possessions and finished with just 17 points, a week after posting 52 against Central Oklahoma. The number of tackles for Jones was five more than his previous career high, and the preseason All-American now leads the MIAA in tackles per game (16.0), just as he did a year ago. The 6-0 senior linebacker is a native of Whitesboro, Texas where he attended Callisburg High School.

MIAA Special Teams Athlete of the Week
Julio Segura, K, Lincoln

Segura made a big impact in the kicking game, handling punting and kickoff duties for Lincoln in the Blue Tigers 47-34 win over Division I FCS opponent Grambling State on Saturday (Sept. 14). Segura averaged 30.5 yards on four punts, pinning GSU inside its own 20 on three of those kicks. He also averaged 56.0 yards on kickoffs, kicking for 510 yards on nine kicks. The 6-3 junior punter and kicker is from Los Angeles, Calif. where he competed at East LA High School.

— MIAA Press Release —

Chiefs hold off Cowboys 17-16, improve to 2-0

ChiefsLed by a new quarterback in Alex Smith and a new coach in Andy Reid, the Kansas City Chiefs so far have looked nothing like the team that had the worst record in the NFL last season.

The all-red outfits they donned for the first time Sunday drove home the point.

Playing nearly mistake-free for the second straight week, Smith threw for 223 yards and two touchdowns against the ball-hawking Dallas Cowboys, and the Chiefs defense held when it needed to in the fourth quarter to preserve a 17-16 victory.

”When you’re trying to build something, you need to win games like this,” said Smith, who also had a game-high 57 yards rushing. ”These are the games you look at in November and December. You need these types of wins, not only the caliber of the win but the style of win.

”It’s not always going to be pretty,” he said, ”but you have to find a way to bear down.”

The Chiefs did that marvelously in the fourth quarter.

Dwayne Bowe’s go-ahead touchdown catch and Ryan Succop’s field goal had staked them to a 17-13 lead, but the Cowboys were on the move in the closing minutes. After Tony Romo threw three straight incompletions, though, Dan Bailey had to kick a 53-yard field goal.

The Chiefs regained possession with 3:55 left. Jamaal Charles helped them grind out a couple first downs, and a pass interference call on Morris Claiborne on third-and-10 gave Kansas City another set of downs. That kept Romo from having any time to orchestrate some late-game magic.

”We ask a lot of certain players on this team and they showed up,” Chiefs cornerback Brandon Flowers said. ”We did a great job of holding them down.”

Romo, who was playing with bruised ribs, finished 30 of 42 for 298 yards. His favorite target was Dez Bryant, who had nine catches for 141 yards and the Cowboys’ only touchdown.

”You got to realize, you can’t forget all the work that you put in to go out and be a good football team,” Bryant said.

The Cowboys (1-1) forced the New York Giants into six turnovers in their opener, but couldn’t turn the same trick against Kansas City. After preaching ball security all week, the Chiefs got through their second straight game without throwing an interception or losing a fumble.

”Takeaways and points, man, on both sides of the ball. We try to eliminate the turnovers and we try to score points,” Reid said. ”It’s as simple as that.”

The Chiefs, coming off an uplifting win at Jacksonville, were amped for his first game as their coach at Arrowhead Stadium. A capacity crowd roared when they rolled onto the field in all-red uniforms, departing from traditional white pants to signify the start of a new era.

They kept on rolling, too. Kansas City marched 77 yards on the opening series, the highlight coming when Smith scrambled 17 yards on third-and-15 and executed a Fosbury Flop over a defender for a first down. Smith capped the drive with a short TD toss to Charles.

That’s when the Romo-to-Bryant connection got on track.

Bryant outwrestled cornerback Brandon Flowers for a 53-yard catch that helped set up Bailey’s first field goal. He then hauled in a short TD catch to give Dallas a 10-7 lead.

The Cowboys blocked Ryan Succop’s 57-yard try to carry their lead into halftime, and then Bryant caught three more passes to set up another field goal in the third quarter. But the Chiefs answered when Smith hit Bowe on a 12-yard slant for a 14-13 lead later in the quarter.

Dallas fumbled on its next two possessions – Lance Dunbar coughed it up first and then Romo was strip-sacked by Ron Parker. But its defense stiffened each time, first forcing a field goal and then getting a sack from Bruce Carter to push the Chiefs out of Succop’s range.

The Cowboys marched deep into Chiefs territory one last time, but again couldn’t find the end zone. And when Romo got the ball back, there was hardly any time left.

”We had a good plan and did some things that gave us a chance to win this football game. We put ourselves in position, but we didn’t,” Romo said. ”Ultimately, that’s all that matters.”

— Associated Press —

MWSU women’s golf team tied for 9th after day one at Lake Elmo Invite

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western women’s golf team shot a 341 on day one of the 2013 Holiday Inn & Suites Lake Elmo Invitational which puts them in 9th place in the 15 team field.

Central Oklahoma leads the charge shooting s 301 which is 18 strokes better than second place Augustana College (319). The Griffons are one stroke behind Sioux Falls (340) and two strokes ahead of Southwest Minnesota State (343).

The Griffons are led by sophomore Callie Wilson who fired a round one 82 which puts her in a tie for 22nd. Shelby Stone fired an 84 putting her in a tie for 38th while Amber Chivington, Madison Romjue and Darcy Smith finished with 87, 88 and 93 respectively. Anna Kloeppel played as an individual finishing with a round on 80 putting her in a tie for 12th.

The leader of the event is Bethany Darrough of Central Oklahoma who shot a 73 which is one stroke better than Christy Nelson of Upper Iowa (74).

The final round of the event will be played Monday with a shotgun start at 9:00 am.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Kansas City comes up short in series finale at Detroit

RoyalsMax Scherzer could only watch as the lead – and another shot at his 20th win – slipped away.

The Detroit right-hander didn’t mind, especially once Alex Avila’s homer put the Tigers ahead again moments later.

Avila homered twice, including a tiebreaking solo shot in the eighth inning that lifted Detroit over the Kansas City Royals 3-2 Sunday. Scherzer was in line for his 20th win when reliever Drew Smyly allowed the Royals to tie it in the top of the eighth, but Avila answered with a drive to right-center for his 11th home run this season.

”We’re just looking to win the game,” Scherzer said. ”I don’t care if I win another game, if we win our division, that’s all that matters.”

The AL Central-leading Tigers remained five games ahead of second-place Cleveland, which beat the Chicago White Sox.

Scherzer has two losses and two no-decisions since a 19-1 start but was terrific Sunday. He allowed a run and five hits with 12 strikeouts and one walk in seven innings. He was on track to become baseball’s first 20-game winner this year when he pitched out of a second-and-third, one-out jam in the seventh to preserve a one-run lead.

But Smyly (6-0) allowed a leadoff double to Alcides Escobar in the eighth. After a flyout by Alex Gordon, Emilio Bonifacio struck out – with Escobar stealing third on the third strike.

With Eric Hosmer batting, Smyly bounced a wild pitch that didn’t skip too far away from Avila. Hosmer, who hits left-handed, stood and motioned to Escobar, who gambled by trying to score. Avila jumped up to retrieve the ball, which had bounced up the first-base line – but the Detroit catcher plowed right into Hosmer, who had moved slightly to his right in an apparent effort to get out of the way.

That collision cost the Tigers any chance to catch Escobar. Tigers manager Jim Leyland came out to discuss the play with plate umpire James Hoye, but the run stood.

”It wasn’t interference,” Avila said. ”It was the right call. It was just a weird situation.”

Avila’s homer in the bottom half put the Tigers back on top. After a poor start at the plate, Avila is hitting .313 since the All-Star break.

”Just trying to hit the ball hard. There’s nothing that I changed, there’s no magic or secret to it,” Avila said. ”I’m just having some luck, some good swings and hitting the ball hard, really.”

Joaquin Benoit got three outs for his 20th save in 20 chances.

Jeremy Guthrie (14-11) pitched all eight innings for the Royals, who remained 3 1-2 games back in the AL wild-card race.

”I thought he could get us to the end. In hindsight, I pushed him too far, but I thought he could get us through the bottom of the order and maybe get the win or turn it over to the pen with a tie game,” Kansas City manager Ned Yost said. ”He did a lot of bending, but he didn’t break.”

Guthrie allowed three runs and 13 hits. He struck out four and walked one.

Avila’s first homer was a two-run drive in the second. Gordon hit a solo homer for Kansas City in the fourth.

Detroit left 10 men on base. In the fifth, Miguel Cabrera led off with a single and Prince Fielder followed with a double. They were stranded when Guthrie retired Victor Martinez, Andy Dirks and Omar Infante on consecutive groundouts.

Gordon’s solo homer down the line in right field to lead off the fourth made it 2-1, and Bonifacio followed with a single. Scherzer found a groove after that, retiring 10 of 11 with nine strikeouts before a one-out single by Salvador Perez in the seventh.

— Associated Press —

Northwest soccer loses in 2 OTs at Winona State

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State women’s soccer team finished the weekend with a two overtime loss at the hands of Winona State Sunday, 2-1.

The Bearcats were able to get on the board first in the 19th minute when Fiona Maloney hit the upper left corner off of a free kick for her second goal of the season and to put her team up 1-0.

Northwest finished the first half holding onto the lead, but an early penalty kick in the second half from Winona State tied the contest up 1-1. The game could not be finished inside regulation and headed into overtime.

The teams combined for four shots in the first overtime period with both goalies coming up big recording one save each.

WSU was able to end the match with a goal by Caitlin Lilly in the 109th minute during the second overtime period for a final score of 2-1.

Kelsey Adams posted a season high 11 saves in the game to bring her within 14 of Northwest all-time saves record (339).

The Bearcats (1-3) will return home to Bearcat Pitch Friday as they host Lindenwood (3-2) to open up MIAA play with a 4 pm start time.

— Northwest Sports Information —

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