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Bearcat soccer team falls Sunday to Northern State

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State women’s soccer team was unable to get on the board against Northern State Sunday as they were shutout 2-0 for their first loss of the season.

The first half was a battle of possession with the Bearcat defense stepping up and not allowing a shot on goal from the Wolves. Northwest managed seven shots in the first half, but none of them found the back of the net.

The Wolves didn’t wait long to end the 0-0 tie in the second half as Allie MacDonald put in the first goal of the match in the 47th minute.

Northwest was able to get off 11 shots in the second half but were unable to capitalize on them.

NSU was able to put in a second goal in the 85th minute to go up 2-0.

The Bearcats were unable to recover and fell to the Wolves 2-0 and move their season record to 1-1. Northwest will head to St. Cloud, Min. to take on St. Cloud State (2-0) Friday with kickoff scheduled for 7 pm.

— Northwest Sports Information —

Cardinals extend NL Central lead with sweep of Pirates

CardsMichael Wacha is glad he’s graduated to a pennant race.

After finishing his college career at Texas A&M just over a year ago, the rookie pitched seven shutout innings and drove in two runs as the St. Louis Cardinals routed the Pittsburgh Pirates 9-2 Sunday for a three-game sweep.

The Cardinals outscored Pittsburgh 26-10 overall in taking the NL Central lead.

”It helped me going to A&M and playing in those big-time games and I guess gets me prepared for it,” Wacha said. ”So I just try not to think too much. I go out there and try to go out there and just trust myself. It ended up working out pretty well.”

The Pirates arrived at Busch Stadium this weekend with a 1 1/2-game division lead and a chance to cement their first winning season since 1992. They left trailing the Cardinals by 1 1/2 games and still stuck on 81 victories.

This was the last time this season Pittsburgh and St. Louis were scheduled to play.

Wacha (3-0) allowed two hits and walked two, both of which were erased on double plays. He struck out two and never had more than one runner on at a time.

Wacha hasn’t allowed a run in 19 2-3 consecutive innings.

”A young pitcher coming in and just staying within himself, really establishing the strike zone early,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. ”It seemed like he made some really good pitches as he got deeper into the game. He’s just making pitches all day. It’s impressive.”

Pittsburgh starter Charlie Morton (7-4) left with discomfort in his left foot in the second inning. He allowed five runs on six hits and two walks in 1 2-3 innings.

Morton left for Pittsburgh before the game was over and won’t join the team in Texas where it starts a three-game series Monday.

Manager Clint Hurdle said he didn’t know the extent of Morton’s injury. Hurdle said Morton was hurt when he was backing up a base.

”We weren’t sharp in any particular area of the game all weekend,” Hurdle said. ”They were much sharper than us across the board. It’s very difficult to win a game when you are not functioning.”

Morton hadn’t surrendered more than two runs since the Cardinals tagged him for five in a 13-0 victory on Aug. 1 in Pittsburgh. He went on to win his next three decisions over five starts, including a no-decision after giving up two runs in seven innings on Aug. 13 at St. Louis.

Wacha got his second career hit with a single up the middle on the first pitch he saw from Vin Mazzaro in a four-run fifth that scored David Freese and Matt Adams. St. Louis used 10 batters in the 28-minute inning – exactly how long Wacha needed to get through six innings of pitching.

”That was a lot of fun,” Wacha said of his hit. ”I told myself that I was going to hop on the first heater. I was able to sneak it by the shortstop up the middle. I was pretty fired up about that.”

Wacha also helped set up a three-run second with a sacrifice bunt that pushed Pete Kozma to third in front of consecutive doubles from Matt Carpenter and Jon Jay.

Jay scored on Morton’s final offering, a wild pitch that bounced just in front of the left-handed batter’s box.

The Cardinals jumped in front with two runs in the first. Carpenter and Jay singled to start the inning and Matt Holliday walked to load the bases. Carlos Beltran hit a sacrifice fly and Yadier Molina had an RBI grounder.

”We all knew what was at stake,” Carpenter said. ”This is the last time we get to play these guys, so it was a big series. I couldn’t be happier with the way it played out. Not just the fact that we won all three, but the fashion that we won all three. Really dominated, I feel like, every aspect of the game.”

Pittsburgh scored twice in the ninth off reliever Sam Freeman. Garrett Jones hit an RBI double and Gaby Sanchez had a sacrifice fly.

Jones said Wacha had the Pirates guessing all day.

”He has deception,” he said. ”That downward angle can be tricky. He was able to hit his spots and he has a good arm.”

— Associated Press —

MWSU women’s golfers finish 8th at Augustana Invite

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western women’s golf team finished in 8th place at the Augustana Invitational which was held at Bakker Crossing. The Griffons moved up one place on day two of the invitational firing a 329 which was eight strokes better than their first round 337. The Griffons (666) was eight strokes better than Winona State (674) and 12 strokes behind Dakota Wesleyan (654). Minnesota State (Mankato) won the event with a two round 602 (301-301) which was 12 strokes better than Augustana’s 614 (302-312). There were 11 teams in the field.

Individually the Griffons were led by two sophomores. Amber Chivington and Callie Wilson both finished in 29th place firing 163 (82-81). Freshman Madison Romjue finished in a tie for 32nd with a 165 (85-80) while senior Darcy Smith played as an individual tying for 45th with a 169 (86-83). Senior Shelby Stone fired a 175 (88-87) while sophomore Anna Kloeppel fired 177 (88-89).

Tabitha Kunst, Dani Selberg and Kanya Sethasompobe all from Minnesota State tied for first with 149’s. Kunts shot 77-72, Selberg shot 75-74 and Sethasompobe fired 74-75.

The Griffons return to action on Sunday, September 15 when they participate in the Concordia-St. Paul Holiday Inn Invitational in Lake Elmo, Minn. The event will be a two day event and will be played at Tartan Park Golf Club.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Northwest tennis teams open with wins against Washburn

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri men’s tennis team opened its fall 2013 schedule over the weekend at the Washburn Invitational at the Kossover Tennis Center. The Bearcats won all three championship flights, including two singles and a doubles title.

It was an all Bearcat final in the A Flight singles bracket with Lluis Altimires and Sergio De Vilchez each advancing through their draw. In the BFlight, Julien Couronne beat Decho Valev of Rockhurst in straight sets, 6-4, 6-0. Altimires and De Vilchez teamed up to beat the Nebraska-Kearney team of Yeswanth Nadella and Milton Cacace in the doubles final, 9-8.

Up next, Northwest will head to the Midwestern Tournament in Wichita Falls,Texas, on Friday, Sept. 13.

The Northwest Missouri women’s tennis team opened its fall 2013 schedule over the weekend at the Washburn Invitational at the Kossover Tennis Center.

The Bearcats were well represented on the final day of competition. Camila Quesada made it to the finals of the A Flight Singles bracket, falling to Casyn Buchman of Washburn. Stephanie Mannix fell to Tawni Griffey of Emporia State in the consolation finals of the A bracket. In the B singles flight, Ludmila Nikolic fell to Maria Moral Carretero of Washburn in the consolation finals.

Alesix Bartek and Quesada made it to the finals of the doubles competition,falling in the finals to the Washburn team of Jodie Blackim and Buchman.

— Northwest Sports Information —

Missouri pulls away to defeat Toledo

MUJames Franklin made crucial big plays on consecutive scoring drives in the second half and Missouri pulled away from Toledo for a 38-23 victory on Saturday.

Missouri (2-0) led 24-23 after Toledo (0-2) scored its first two touchdowns of the year but Franklin’s 21-yard keeper set up Henry Josey’s second 1-yard touchdown run of the game which extended Missouri’s lead to eight.

The quarterback later had a 6-yard carry on fourth-and-3 and an 11-yard gain on third-and-9 to set up Marcus Murphy’s 8-yard run to conclude the scoring with 10:29 to go.

Missouri coach Gary Pinkel beat the school at which he’s a Hall of Famer and the career wins leader with the help of a few goofs by the visitors.

Toledos’ David Fluellen had 111 yards on 14 carries and 10 catches for 100 yards.

Markus Golden got a gift 70-yard interception return in the third quarter when the ball squirted out of Toledo quarterback Terrance Owens’ hands and right into his arms. Jeremiah Detmer hit three field goals in the first half, connecting from 24, 46 and 41 yards, but punted a low line drive into the back of a Toledo lineman, a 9-yard net to the Rockets’ 44 that gave Missouri a short field on the Murphy score.

Owens scored on a 4-yard keeper and hit Alonzo Russell for a 41-yard score, most of it on a sideline sprint that capitalized on blown coverage, in a span of 5 1/2 minutes in the third quarter to shave the deficit to one.

Attendance was announced at 56,785 in a game that began in 90-plus degree heat. Less than half remained for the finish.

Golden’s touchdown came just a few plays after linebacker Andrew Wilson, one of Missouri’s top defensive players, was ejected for a borderline targeting hit on Marcus Reedy on an incomplete pass. Golden was whistled for unsportsmanlike conduct after planting the ball on the turf in the end zone, and Reedy’s resulting 59-yard kickoff return helped set up Owens’ touchdown.

Dorial Green-Beckham beat one-on-one coverage from Jordan Martin on a 9-yard touchdown catch with 1:14 to go in the half for a 17-9 lead. Missouri got a big stop in the other end zone to end the half, with Matt White intercepting a pass from Owens that was tipped.

Levi Copeland’s 51-yard diving reception at the 7, with three defenders in futile pursuit, set up Josey’s first 1-yard run.

The officiating crew needed alternate Chad Walker after umpire David Parker sprained his left knee in the first quarter.

— Associated Press —

Kansas State bounces back and takes care of Louisiana, 48-27

KSUTramaine Thompson returned a kickoff 94 yards for a touchdown, Ty Zimmerman brought back an interception 32 yards for another score and Kansas State bounced back from a season-opening loss to beat Louisiana-Lafayette 48-27 on Saturday night.

Thompson also returned a punt 61 yards to the Ragin’ Cajuns’ 1-yard line in the third quarter to set up a touchdown run by Jake Waters. Zimmerman’s interception return moments later gave Kansas State touchdowns on offense, defense and special teams in a span of minutes.

Waters threw for 278 yards while splitting time with backup Daniel Sams, who ran for 63 yards and a touchdown. Tyler Lockett had eight catches for 111 yards, and John Hubert ran for two touchdowns as the Wildcats avoided their first 0-2 start since 1989.

Terrance Broadway ran for a touchdown and threw for a touchdown for the Ragin’ Cajuns (0-2), and Darryl Surgent returned a kickoff a school-record 100 yards for another score.

Both teams began the season with lofty aspirations, and both trying to rebound from season-opening disappointments – the defending Big 12 champion Wildcats lost at home to North Dakota State last Friday night, and Louisiana-Lafayette fell 34-14 at Arkansas last Saturday.

Both got off to slow starts this week, too.

Kansas State finally got in gear after the teams traded field goals, and Hubert capped a 71-yard drive with a 7-yard scamper. The Ragin’ Cajuns failed to pull off a fake punt on their ensuing possession, and Sams finished another TD drive with a hip-swiveling 13-yard run to make it 17-3.

Jack Cantele’s second field goal of the half gave Kansas State a 20-3 lead at the break.

The real fireworks came early in the third quarter.

Thompson fielded the opening kickoff of the second half, made a couple of nimble moves up the Louisiana-Lafayette sideline and raced the rest of the way to the end zone. The return gave Kansas State at least one kickoff return touchdown in a nation-leading nine straight seasons.

Thompson’s big punt return and Waters’ TD plunge gave Kansas State a 34-3 lead.

The Ragin’ Cajuns answered with Surgent’s kickoff return and an interception by Dominick Jones later in the third quarter set up Broadway’s touchdown run and got them within 34-17.

Louisiana-Lafayette got the ball back quickly, but momentum swung back to Kansas State when Zimmerman caught a tipped pass over the middle and returned the pick for a touchdown. It was the senior’s 11th career interception, moving him into sixth place in the school record books.

Broadway tried to rally the Ragin’ Cajuns once more, hitting Robinson from 18 yards out for a touchdown late in the third quarter. After getting the ball back, their next drive stalled and they had to settle for Stephen Brauchle’s 26-yard field goal to get within 41-27 with 10:55 left.

Kansas State put the game away when Sams, taking over for Waters, hit tight end Zach Trujillo for a 27-yard gain. The speedy Sams then ripped off three long runs to set up Hubert, the 5-foot-7 wrecking ball, who powered into the end zone for his second touchdown.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City defeats Detroit and stays unbeaten vs. Verlander

RoyalsSalvador Perez is on a power surge and the Kansas City Royals keeping hanging on in the wild-card race.

Perez hit a two-run homer off Justin Verlander and the Royals beat the Detroit Tigers 4-3 on Saturday night.

Perez drove a two-out pitch over the left-field wall to put the Royals ahead 4-2. He is hitting .347 with seven home runs and 20 RBIs in his past 21 games.

”Soon as I hit it, I knew the ball was gone,” Perez said. ”I hit it pretty good.”

Verlander (12-11) is 0-3 with three no-decisions in six starts since an Aug. 6 victory at Cleveland.

The Tigers have dropped his past six starts and are 13-17 in his 30 starts this season.

”I think he did a great job,” Tigers catcher Brayan Pena said. ”The pitch to Perez it was a pitch down. He struck out a lot of guys and he kept the ball down. It was just one pitch that hurt us.”

The Royals have won all five games Verlander has started against them this season. Verlander allowed four runs and eight hits in seven innings, while walking one and striking out seven.

”You can say what you want, but Verlander is tough as nails,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”He’s as good as they come. And we’ve done very well against him. They’ve all been nip-and-tuck, one-run games for the most part, but we’ve come out on top and that’s all that matters.”

Wade Davis (7-10), the second of five Kansas City pitchers, picked up the victory on his 28th birthday, entering with the bases loaded and allowing just one runner to score when he walked Miguel Cabrera with the bases loaded after being down in the count 0-2.

”I’m comfortable in that situation, keeping a low heart rate,” Davis said. ”I’ve faced him (Cabrera) a lot. I knew what he was trying to do. I wasn’t going to give in and give him something to whack off the wall or over it. That was just a walk, but hey it paid off.”

Greg Holland worked a perfect ninth for his 39th save in 42 chances.

Cabrera, who leads the American League with 133 RBIs, also singled home another run in the seventh.

Royals left-hander Danny Duffy failed to pitch deep into the game in back-to-back starts. Duffy, who walked four in 3 2-3 innings in his previous start, walked five Tigers in 4 1-3 innings.

”I didn’t have my best command, but the stuff was there,” Duffy said. ”As long as we’re shaking hands after the game, that’s good with me.”

Duffy walked two in the first inning and that led to a run when Price Fielder’s single scored Austin Jackson, who led off the game with a four-pitch walk.

”Duffy was a little wild, which we were hoping for, but we just couldn’t come up with a big hit,” Tigers manager Jim Leyland said.

Duffy allowed a Nick Castellanos infield single in the fifth, and with one out, walked Roman Santiago and Jackson on eight pitches to load the bases. Davis replaced Duffy and walked Cabrera to score Castellanos.

”It took Duffy about five hitters to find his slot,” Yost said. ”Once he found it, he was pretty good from the second, third and fourth and started to lose it in the fifth. That’s when we brought Wade in and man what a great job he did.

”Danny did a great job of keeping us in the game. Your pitch count can get up, but you can’t let the game get away from you. Every time Danny has gotten big pitch counts or struggled with command, his stuff is so good, it keeps us in the game.”

Emilio Bonifacio’s bunt single in the third scored Alcides Escobar with the first Kansas City run.

”That’s part of my game – bunting,” Bonifacio said. ”I had that in mind soon as Escobar got to third.”

Escobar’s single in the fifth scored Jarrod Dyson, who walked and stole second.

When Pena threw out Bonifacio stealing second in the first inning, it ended the Tigers streak at 24 without catching a runner attempting to steal. Bonifacio had been perfect in his first 13 stolen attempts in 23 games since joining the Royals.

— Associated Press —

Jayhawks open season with 31-14 win over South Dakota

KUJames Sims scored twice and Jake Heaps passed for 110 yards and one TD in his much-anticipated debut, leading Kansas past South Dakota 31-14 Saturday night and matching the Jayhawks’ entire victory total of 2012.

His yardage may not look impressive. But Heaps displayed a strong arm and a quick release in his first action since transferring from BYU, where he smashed most freshman passing records, and sitting out last season while the Jayhawks sank to 1-11 in Charlie Weis’ first year as coach.

He was 10 for 20 and several of his misses probably could have been caught. The Jayhawks (1-0) rushed for 280 yards against the lower-division Coyotes (1-1) with Sims going 94 yards on 16 carries.

On one especially memorable play for long-suffering Jayhawk fans, Heaps hit Justin McKay with a five-yard touchdown pass – the first scoring catch by a Kansas wide receiver since Oct. 22, 2011.

Josh Vander Maten was 8 for 18 for 67 yards and one touchdown for South Dakota. He also had 78 of the South Dakota’s 219 yards rushing.

Sims, who lead Big 12 runners in rushing in conference games last year, scored on a one-yard run in the second quarter and a six-yard burst around left end in the third. Darrian Miller had 72 yards on 14 carries, including two 17-yard scampers in the 71-yard touchdown drive that put Kansas ahead 21-7 in the third quarter.

At kickoff, it was a sweltering 97 degrees in this rain-starved corner of the Midwest. The Coyotes, looking to snap a 15-game road losing streak, took a 7-0 lead on Vander Maten’s 2-yard TD pass to Drew Potter, who sneaked out of the backfield unnoticed and was all by himself in the end zone. Jordan Roberts picked up 14 yards on a counter play and then Vander Maten ran 13 yards to the 2.

Heaps, seeing his first action since Nov. 19, 2011, made his first long connection when he rifled a 25-yard pass to Tony Pierson in the second quarter. A moment later, Josh Ford appeared to make the first TD catch by a Kansas wide receiver since 2011 when he took a short pass and broke several tackles while leading across the goal line. But replays nullified the score and put the ball on the 1, setting up Sims for the score.

Keon Stowers, intercepted Vander Maten’s pass late in the second quarter and, picking up blocks, the 298-pounder rumbled 42 yards into the end zone with the first interception by a Jayhawk defensive lineman in 45 games. But a penalty for blocking in the back brought the ball back and moments later, Sims’ fumble was recovered by South Dakota’s Aaron Swift on the 2.

But the Coyotes failed to pick up a first down and a line drive punt out of their end zone was returned 29 to the 9 by Connor Embree. One play later, Heaps drilled a 5-yard bullet to McKay in the end zone for the Jayhawks’ first scoring pass to a wide receiver in 17 games.

The Jayhawks’ third TD came on a 12-play, 71-yard drive that was entirely on the ground. Sims went around left end for a 21-7 Kansas lead with 7:34 left in the third.

Vander Maten kept a drive alive with a 37-yard third-down pass to Tyson Graham Jr., and then capped the drive with a 9-yard run. Kansas’ Brandon Bourbon scored on an 8-yard run with about 6 minutes left in the fourth quarter.

— Associated Press —

Nebraska starts quick and cruises past Southern Miss

NUScore one for the Nebraska defense. Actually, score two.

Stanley Jean-Baptiste and Ciante Evans returned first-quarter interceptions for touchdowns and the No. 22 Cornhuskers rebounded from a lackluster performance in their opener to make quick work of Southern Mississippi in a 56-13 win Saturday night.

With No. 18 UCLA visiting next week, it was critical for the Huskers (2-0) to create a positive vibe after they were skewered for 602 yards by Wyoming in a 37-34 win last week.

The Bruins beat Nebraska in Los Angeles last year, amassing 653 yards in the process. Don’t think coach Bo Pelini won’t remind his team about that stat over the next few days.

So, yes, the Huskers needed a feel-good performance, even if it was against a Southern Miss team that has the longest current losing streak in the FBS at 14 games.

”It was a big confidence boost,” defensive end Randy Gregory said. ”We didn’t play that well last week. We got the win but weren’t proud of it.”

Nebraska limited the Golden Eagles (0-2) to 284 yards and intercepted four passes, with the first two picks going for early touchdowns.

Jean-Baptiste jumped in front of Rickey Bradley Jr. just as Allan Bridgford’s pass arrived on the third play of the game and ran it back 43 yards.

Evans put the Huskers up 21-3 with the first of his two interceptions, catching a ball tipped by Tyre’oune Holmes and going 22 yards to the end zone.

”That,” Evans said, ”was all she wrote.”

Just about.

Nebraska limited the Eagles to 62 yards rushing, but only 4 of those came before the fourth quarter. The Huskers had nine tackles for loss after having no stops behind the line of scrimmage against Wyoming.

”I thought we made good progress,” Pelini said.

What impressed Pelini most was that he saw a reduction in the number of missed tackles and missed assignments, and improved communication among his players.

”Our ability to make adjustments during the game was 100 fold better than it was a week ago,” he said.

Taylor Martinez threw for 170 yards and three touchdowns, Ameer Abdullah ran for 114 yards and two TDs and the Huskers finished with 285 yards rushing.

This game was all about Nebraska’s defense, though, and how it would respond to the harsh criticism it took after the Wyoming debacle.

The Huskers’ only lull came on Southern Miss’ first series of the second half. Bridgford’s 41-yard touchdown pass to Bradley made it 35-13.

”My biggest problem with the defense – and I addressed it with them on the sideline – is how we came out in that third quarter,” Pelini said. ”To their credit, they responded to the challenge and got it righted in a hurry.”

After Bradley’s touchdown, Kenny Bell ran back the kickoff 63 yards, and Abdullah scored from 37 yards on the next play.

Evans intercepted Bridgford on the first play of Southern Miss’ following possession, and Martinez threw a 26-yard touchdown pass to Sam Burtch to make it 49-13.

That was it for Martinez, who completed 15 of 23 passes for 170 yards. Ron Kellogg III and Tommy Armstrong Jr. quarterbacked the Huskers the rest of the way.

Nebraska’s two interception returns for touchdowns marked the first time the Huskers have had two defensive scores in a game since they had two picks for TDs against Idaho in 2010. It also was in that game against Idaho that Nebraska last had four interceptions in a game.

”I was disappointed in the way we played to start the football game,” Southern Miss coach Todd Monken said. ”Come to a tough place to play, start the opening series, get a first down and then turn it over – let alone, it leads to a score. Second week in a row we’ve done that early in the game. It really makes it difficult to come back.”

The Huskers tinkered with their defensive lineup, starting junior-college transfer Randy Gregory at end and freshmen Josh Banderas and Nathan Gerry at linebacker. Nebraska hadn’t started a true freshman on defense since Evans in 2010.

”We base it on practice – who practices the best,” Pelini said. ”Coming out of the week, we went with who we felt gave us the best chance to play like we want to play.”

Bridgford, who threw for 377 yards last week in a loss to Texas State, was 21 of 35 for 222 yards. But Bridgford and the Eagles, who turned over the ball six times last week, couldn’t overcome the four interceptions – the last one thrown by Nick Mullens.

The schedule originally called for Southern Miss to host the Huskers in Hattiesburg, Miss., but the Eagles agreed to move the game to Lincoln in exchange for $2.1 million. The teams play again in Lincoln in 2015.

— Associated Press —

High School Football Scores – Friday, Sept. 6

riggertFootballWEEK 2

CITY
Central 15, Platte County 12

Lafayette 30, Marshall 14

Bishop LeBlond 69, Kansas City East 6

South Nodaway 36, St. Joseph Christian 34

Grain Valley 23, Benton 17

AREA
Harrisonville 29, Savannah 22

Maryville 46, St. Pius X 0

Chillicothe 42, Kirksville 8

Cameron 38, Excelsior Springs 15

Smithville 16, Center 7

East Buchanan 38, South Harrison 32

Mid-Buchanan 21, Maysville 6

Hamilton 35, Gallatin 7

Lathrop 47, Polo 8

Lawson 42, Richmond 13

University Academy 36, North Platte 0

West Platte 35, Wellington-Napoleon 0

Salisbury 52, Braymer 7

Milan 48, Albany 26

Lone Jack 27, King City 20

Princeton 27, Putnam County 6

8-MAN
Hardin-Central 78, Stewartsville 18

Rock Port 62, North Nodaway 12

Mound City 46, South Holt 0

Stanberry 62, Nodaway-Holt 14

Tarkio 74, Craig/Fairfax 20

Worth County 88, West Nodaway 68

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