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Chiefs select Central Michigan OT Eric Fisher with No. 1 overall pick

ChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs began to realize about two weeks ago that Central Michigan’s Eric Fisher would be their choice with the No. 1 overall pick in the NFL draft.

The only reason they used up the 10 minutes allotted them Thursday night? The offensive tackle’s cellphone kept cutting out inside New York City’s Radio City Music Hall.

“We waited a while because we had a hard time getting ahold of him,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said with a smile. “The phone was dying. That was the reason for waiting.”

Evidently, Fisher was worth the wait.

The Chiefs picked him ahead of Texas A&M offensive tackle Luke Joeckel, who went No. 2 to the Jacksonville Jaguars, to kick off a draft heavy on linemen. Fisher is a potential replacement for Branden Albert, and should help protect the blindside of new quarterback Alex Smith.

“It was almost surreal that phone call was happening,” said Fisher, just the third offensive lineman picked No. 1 since the AFL-NFL merger in 1970. “It was my goal all along, but I think it didn’t hit me until my phone rang.”

The Chiefs had the top pick in the NFL draft for the first time in franchise history. But rather than announce their intentions early, like the Indianapolis Colts did in picking Andrew Luck last season, new general manager John Dorsey and Reid decided to wait until they were on the clock before making their choice public.

Kansas City was still considering a handful of players early this week, including Joeckel, who many believed was the best available player. Dorsey also indicated that he would listen to offers from teams trying to trade up until the last possible minute.

When nothing materialized, Dorsey phoned in his selection and Fisher became the first player from Central Michigan to be picked first overall.

“What you’re getting is a very athletic player, a great kid, a smart kid – engineering major,” Reid said. “He can play any position along the line, and loves to play the game.”

The Chiefs were in a need of a quarterback after going 2-14 a year ago, but without a top-end talent available, they chose to acquire Smith in a trade with San Francisco. That allowed them to spend the most coveted pick in the draft on who they believed to be the best player.

Fisher is only the third player in the past 20 years to be drafted first from a non-BCS school, and the first non-quarterback. The only other player out of Central Michigan to go in the first round was Joe Staley, the San Francisco 49ers’ Pro Bowl left tackle.

With surprising athleticism in a 6-foot-7, 306-pound frame, Fisher rocketed up draft boards after the Senior Bowl. And while he doesn’t play a marquee position such as quarterback, and may not push the needle for many Chiefs fans, Fisher does fill a significant need.

Albert, who the Chiefs picked in the first round in 2008, was given the franchise tag in March and is due to make about $9.3 million next season. But he has repeatedly expressed his unhappiness with the lack of long-term stability, and the Chiefs granted permission to the Dolphins to speak with Albert’s agent, making a trade possible at some point during the draft.

That would allow Fisher to slide into the starting lineup at left tackle. And if Albert is still with the Chiefs next season, one of them could shift to the right side.

“That doesn’t bother me,” Reid said, “because he’s a good football player. I’m going to take the five best guys and put them up there. Position doesn’t matter to me. Never has.”

Fisher certainly isn’t going to quibble: “Wherever I can help the team out, wherever they put me, I’m fine with it,” he said. “Wherever they need me, I’m ready to play.”

Fisher’s only scholarship offers out of high school came from Central Michigan and Eastern Michigan, and he said at the combine in February that he heard from Michigan State and Purdue but that “neither of them really wanted anything to do with me.”

The Chiefs certainly have made him feel wanted.

The only other offensive linemen to be picked first overall had been Orlando Pace, who the Rams selected in 1997, and Jake Long, the choice of the Dolphins in 2008.

“So many great players have been the first pick, and you can throw me in the bunch now. I don’t know if it’s hit me yet,” said Fisher, adding that he will use some of his rookie contract to help his mother retire after 33 years spent working for Volkswagen.

Fisher is the 13th offensive lineman that the Chiefs have drafted in the first round. He also continues a trend: Dorsey helped to pick offensive linemen two of the past four years while he was working for the Green Bay Packers, and Reid selected offensive guard Danny Watkins with the Philadelphia Eagles’ first-round pick in 2011.

“We’re fortunate to have a draft where there’s a number of offensive linemen who are first-round-caliber guys,” Reid said. “That’s what we need here, and we have a good nucleus now.”

— Associated Press —

Northwest men’s tennis dominates All-MIAA honors

Northwest2013riggertA trio from Northwest Missouri State men’s tennis team earned first team selections for the league champions as the MIAA announced conference accolades Thursday.

Highlighting the honors were freshman Sergio De Vilchez who was tabbed Freshman of the Year, while Mark Rosewell earned his third straight Coach of the Year award. Guilherme Narducci also earned the Sportsmanship Award giving the Bearcat men’s and women’s teams a sweep of the award.

Alvaro Riveros and Narducci picked up first team honors at No. 4 and No. 5 singles, respectively. Riveros finished the regular season 18-2 while Narducci recorded an 18-5 mark at No. 5 singles.

Lluis Altimires and De Vilchez were tabbed to the first team at No. 1 doubles after an impressive 24-5 record during the regular season. The duo also currently carries a nine match winning streak into Saturday’s NCAA Central Region match against Washburn.

De Vilchez picked up second team honors at No. 1 singles while Altimires and Jason Harris joined him at No. 3 and No. 6 singles. Harris was also impressive at No. 6 singles posting a 21-4 record and holds an 11 match winning streak.

Narducci and Riveros earned a spot on the all-MIAA second team at No. 2 doubles while Rafael Bugiga and Dylan Bernatzky earned Honorable Mention accolades. Harris and Bernatzky also earned Honorable Mention honors at No. 3 doubles.

Northwest opens postseason play Saturday against Washburn in the first round of the NCAA Central Region tournament. Action from Grube Courts is scheduled to start at 10 a.m.

— Northwest Media Relations —

Gordon’s grand slam caps off Royals’ comeback win at Detroit

RoyalsAlex Gordon had already struck out three times when he came to the plate with the bases loaded in the 10th inning.

”I was just trying to make contact,” the Kansas City outfielder said.

He ended up hitting his first career grand slam, helping the Royals to an encouraging win at the end of a difficult road trip.

Gordon’s drive highlighted a five-run 10th for Kansas City, which rallied against the Detroit bullpen for an 8-3 victory Thursday after Tigers ace Justin Verlander left with a blister on his thumb.

George Kottaras put the Royals ahead 4-3 with a bases-loaded walk off Phil Coke (0-3). Darin Downs came on for Detroit after that, but Gordon broke the game open one out later with a homer that easily cleared the 420-foot marker on the wall in center.

”That’s a big outfield,” Gordon said. ”I think there was a storm coming in that kind of blew it out a little bit.”

The game started after a 30-minute rain delay, another interruption in an unusual trip for the Royals. Kansas City had a game at Boston last Friday postponed because of the manhunt for a suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings.

When the Royals arrived in Detroit for what was supposed to be a three-game series, the opener was rained out Tuesday.

Kansas City has not played a home game since April 14. Since then, the Royals have played seven road games in 11 days. They adjusted fine to the unexpected days off and finished the trip with a two-game split against the Tigers, leaving Comerica Park in first place in the AL Central.

The Royals went 4-3 at Atlanta, Boston and Detroit.

”This was a phenomenal road trip for us,” said right-hander James Shields, who pitched eight solid innings Thursday. ”We’re going to look back at this road trip, and I think it’s going to be a pretty crucial road trip.”

The Royals will be back home Friday night against Cleveland.

Verlander is day to day with what the Tigers said was cracked skin on his throwing thumb. He and manager Jim Leyland described the injury as a blister.

”It developed a little in my last start. Started getting a little bit worse after the fifth, and I started to notice it,” Verlander said. ”I didn’t want to risk it becoming something that I might have to deal with in my next start and the start after that, and then it turns into a month. This way, it isn’t an issue. That’s why I got out of there.”

The right-hander allowed two runs – one earned – in seven innings and left with a 3-2 lead. Bruce Rondon gave up the tying run in the eighth in his major league debut.

Tim Collins (1-0) pitched a scoreless ninth for the Royals and got the win.

Rondon, the hard-throwing 22-year-old who was a candidate in spring training to become Detroit’s closer, began the season in the minor leagues but was called up this week.

Jose Valverde is back with the Tigers, trying to show he can handle the closer spot again, and Rondon came on for the first time Thursday.

He reached 100 mph according to the Comerica Park scoreboard, but Billy Butler led off against him with a single, and pinch-runner Jarrod Dyson stole second. Dyson eventually scored on Lorenzo Cain’s sacrifice fly.

Coke looked sharp in the ninth but lost his control in the 10th as rain began falling harder at Comerica. Cain doubled with one out, and Coke walked Mike Moustakas. After a wild pitch moved the runners to second and third, Jeff Francoeur was walked intentionally, and Coke still couldn’t find the plate against Kottaras.

Downs got Chris Getz to ground into a forceout at the plate, but Gordon’s second homer of the year added four more runs.

Miguel Cabrera opened the scoring with an RBI single in the first, but Butler drove in a run with a single in the third. Butler had three hits on the day and improved to 23 for 55 (.418) off Verlander, the best mark of anyone with at least 30 at-bats against the Detroit ace.

Salvador Perez of Kansas City and Jhonny Peralta of Detroit each hit sacrifice flies in the fourth.

Torii Hunter’s run-scoring single in the fifth gave the Tigers a 3-2 lead.

Verlander allowed eight hits, walked one and struck out four.

Shields, acquired from Tampa Bay in an offseason trade in an effort to bolster Kansas City’s starting rotation, allowed three runs and five hits in eight innings. He walked three and struck out four.

”I felt I was in a good rhythm. I was making my pitches when I needed to,” Shields said. ”That’s a tough team over there. Even if you’re making your pitches, they’re still going to hit you. I think I minimized my damage as well as I could.”

— Associated Press —

Kellogg leaves Northwest after one season to take job at West Texas A&M

NWMSUAfter helping the Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team return to the MIAA Tournament, head coach Mark Kellogg has accepted the same position at West Texas A&M University of the Lone Star Conference.

Kellogg was hired at Northwest April 10, 2012 after a successful tenure at Fort Lewis College that included a national runner-up finish during the 2009-10 season. In his one season at Northwest, Kellogg guided the Bearcats to a 15-13 overall record and advanced to the second round of the MIAA Tournament.

“We are disappointed to lose Mark after only one year. However, when the opportunity comes to return home and be closer to family we certainly wish him, Trisha and their family the best,” said Director of Athletics Mel Tjeerdsma. “We will move quickly to secure a high quality replacement who will build on the momentum of this past season. Our goal is to have a team of outstanding young women who will take our program to the top of the MIAA and reach national prominence.”

The Richardson, Texas native replaced Gene Steinmeyer who retired after the 2011-12 campaign. Steinmeyer stepped down after 13 seasons at Northwest.

A national search for Kellogg’s replacement will begin immediately.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Griffons win first-ever MIAA Championship with sweep of Washburn

MWSUThe Missouri Western baseball team won its first ever MIAA regular season championship with a doubleheader sweep over the Washburn Ichabods Tuesday. The Griffons won game one 3-1 and game two 11-1. MWSU improves to 34-7 overall and 27-4 in MIAA play.

Game 1
MWSU 3, WU 1

Jerad Hawkins made quick work of the Ichabods in game one throwing just 65 pitches in a 3-1 victory. He pitched his first complete game of the season going all seven innings giving up just three hits and one earned run. He struckout four improving to 6-0 on the season.

Missouri Western got on the board in the first inning when Bubba Dotson singled to right field and then scored on a Kyle Simpson single. The Griffons put pressure on the Ichabods the rest of the game leaving nine runners on base.

The Ichabods tied it up in the 5th when Connor Crimmins hit a homer over the left field fence tying the score at one.

The Griffons put runners on once again in the sixth and this time Michael Schulze got a two out single scoring Jake Schrader and Spencer Shockley.

Western pounded out 10 hits in the game with Schulze, Dotson and Simpson all getting two.

Brad Alberts falls to 0-6 going six innings. He gave up 10 hits and one eraned run while striking out five.

Game 2
MWSU 11, WU 1 (8 innings)

Missouri Western scored seven runs in the final two innings of game two picking up 11-1 run rule shortened game over the Ichabods. Shockley hit two home runs in the game including the walk off two run homer of the left field fence.

The Griffons got on the board in the first when Michael Schulze walked and scored on a Simpson ground out. The Ichabods tied the score at one in the third when Zacka Haller homered to center field.

The rest of the game would be all Western as they scored at least one run in four of the final five innings. In the fourth the Griffons scored two runs on two hits and capitalized on one Washburn error making it a 3-1 game. Shockley opened up the inning with his third homer of the season.

In the fifth Grant Fink tripled in Simpson making it 4-1. The Griffon bats got going in the 7th getting three more hits and three runs. The Griffons got RBI hits from Nate Ramler and Fink in the inning.

In the 8th Missouri Western got four runs on three hits which included the walk-off homer by Shockley. The home run was his fourth of the season.

The Griffons pitching staff was outstanding as they did not give up a walk all day. In the game Mark Spreckels picked up the victory going five innings giving five hits and on earned run. Spreckels improves to 2-1 on the season with the victory.

Kyle Kelly went two innings striking out four of the seven batters he faced while Mason Queen pitched one scoreless inning.

Western had 11 hits in the contest with Shockley going 3-for-4 with three RBI and three runs scored. Fink had two hits with two RBI.

The Ichabods had five hits in the contest as they fall to 9-31 overall and 8-30 in MIAA play. Connor Brady falls to 2-1 going five innings giving up five hits and three earned runs. He also walked four and struck out four.

Missouri Western returns to action this weekend when they travel to Joplin, Mo. for the final MIAA regular season series against the Missouri Southern Lions. The two teams will play a doubleheader on Saturday, April 27 with game time set for 1:00 pm.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri Western softball scores 24 runs in doubleheader sweep of Lincoln

MWSUThe Missouri Western softball team pounded out 27 hits and scored 24 runs in a doubleheader sweep of the Lincoln Blue Tigers Tuesday. The Griffons won game one 7-3 and game two 17-5. The 17 runs ties the most runs in a game by a Griffon team since March 21, 2004 when they did it against South Daktoa. The Griffons improve to 34-12 overall and 18-6 in MIAA play.

Game 1
MWSU 7, LU 3

Western used a five run sixth inning in which they hit four home runs to pick up a 7-3 victory. Keri Lorbert led off the inning with her 12th homer of the season. It also tied Amy Beverly for most home runs in a career with 37. Michelle Stevenson, Taylor Anding and Sarah Elliott also hit home runs in the inning.

Things did not look good early on for the Griffons as the Blue Tigers scored three runs in the first three innings. Kristina Hein singled to center and scored on an Erin Sommerer homer in the first. In the third Sam Kircher hit a homer giving the Blue Tigers a 3-0 lead.

The Griffons responded in the third with two runs on three hits. Bre Fleschner singled in Elliott and Roemmich doubled in Fleschner cutting the lead to 3-2.

Missouri Western pounded out six hits in the five run 6th picking up the victory. MWSU had 11 hits with Roemmich going 3-for-4 with one RBI. The other eight Griffon batters all had one hit in the game.
Jackie Bishop improves to 19-5 overall going all seven innings. She gave up five hits while striking out 10.

The Blue Tigers had five hits with Kircher going 2-for-3. Clari Lorenz picked up the loss going 5.1 innings giving up nine hits and six earned runs while striking out nine. She falls to 9-8 on the season.

Game 2
MWSU 17, LU 5 (5 innings)

Western smacked 16 hits and scored 17 runs in a 17-5 run rule game against the Blue Tigers. The Griffons dominated the second game scoring at least three runs in each inning which included five run innings in the first and third innings.

MWSU had three players with at least three hits. Roemmich, Stevenson and Sorenson all had three hits. Roemmich and Stevenson had four RBI while Sorenson had three.

Bre Fleschner, Roemmich and Stevenson all scored three runs while Roemmich hit her ninth homer of the season.

Janie Smith improves to 15-5 on the season going all five innings. She gave up eight hits and five earned runs with four strikeouts.

The Blue Tiges fall to 14-21-1 overall and 6-16 in MIAA play. Kircher had two hits and three RBI with a home run while Starr McLeod had a two run homer.

The Griffons ruturn to action on Saturday, April 27 when they take on the #21 Central Oklahoma in a doubleheader in Edmond, Okla. Game time is set for 12:00 pm.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Royals come up short in series opener at Detroit, 7-5

RoyalsJose Valverde returned to Detroit with a save and Victor Martinez drove in a pair of runs to help the Tigers beat the Kansas City Royals 7-5 Wednesday night.

Max Scherzer (2-0) got the win, allowing five runs in five innings, with three Tigers relievers finishing the game. Valverde, called up earlier in the day, returned to the Tigers with a perfect ninth inning. Valverde lost the closing role during the postseason and wasn’t offered a contract, but signed a minor-league deal earlier this month and returned to Detroit after a short minor-league stint.

Wade Davis (2-1) gave up seven runs – but only three earned – in 3 2-3 innings. Davis allowed eight hits and four walks while only getting 11 outs.

The Tigers took the lead on Omar Infante’s RBI single in the second, but Kansas City responded with four runs in the third. Salvador Perez and Chris Getz started the inning with singles, and Alex Gordon tied the game with a double. Alcides Escobar and Billy Butler made it 3-1 with RBI singles, giving the Royals five straight hits, and Eric Hosmer drove in the fourth run with a long sacrifice fly.

The Tigers added two more in their half of the third on Martinez’s RBI double and Jhonny Peralta’s run-scoring single. Martinez tried to score from second on Peralta’s double, and was beaten so badly by Jeff Francoeur’s throw from right that he just veered off toward the dugout and was called out for leaving the basepath.

Detroit took control in the fourth when Infante scored on a Mike Moustakas error and Miguel Cabrera followed with a tie-breaking sacrifice fly. Martinez added an RBI single, chasing Davis, but Luis Mendoza walked the next two batters to force in a seventh run.

The Royals loaded the bases with no one out in the fifth, but only scored once, and couldn’t get anything after putting two runners on in the seventh.

— Associated Press —

Western baseball ranked second in first Central Regional poll

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western baseball team comes in 2nd in the first Central Region poll which was released Tuesday, April 24.  The Grriffons won their first ever MIAA Regular Season Title with a doubleheader sweep over Washburn on Wednesday afternoon by scores of 3-1 and 11-1. The Griffons are 34-7 overall and 27-4 in MIAA play.

The top six teams earn a regional bid with the highest seed hosting a double elimination tournament. The Griffons have made an NCAA Regional once in history which was back in 2006.

The only other MIAA school in the top eight is the University of Central Missouri who sits a top the rankings.

The Griffons will play their final regular MIAA series this coming weekend when they travel to Joplin, Mo. to take on the Missouri Southern Lions. The two teams will play a doubleheader on Saturday, April 27 with first pitch scheduled for 1:00 pm. The two teams will play a single nine inning game on Sunday, April 28 with game time set for 1:00 pm.

CENTRAL REGION
1 Central Missouri
2 Missouri Western State
3 Minnesota State
4 Southern Arkansas
5 St. Cloud State
6 Arkansas Tech
7 Wayne State (Neb.)
8 Southwestern Oklahoma State

— MWSU Sports Information —

St. Louis defeats Strasburg, Nationals to complete 3-game sweep

CardsThe St. Louis Cardinals’ very first batter, Matt Carpenter, got it started against Stephen Strasburg by stretching a single into a double when Bryce Harper’s throw to second base was bobbled and fell to the dirt.

One out later, Matt Holliday singled. Carlos Beltran walked. Yadier Molina delivered a two-run single. And then a throwing error on Daniel Descalso’s grounder padded the score.

Just like that, 23 pitches in, the Cardinals built a three-run lead against Strasburg’s Washington Nationals. And that, pretty much, was enough. On the strength of that half-inning, the Cardinals beat the Nationals 4-2 Wednesday to complete a sweep and give Washington’s All-Star ace the only four-start losing streak of his young career.

”It was good to get on Strasburg early,” Cardinals shortstop Pete Kozma said. ”That’s what we were trying to do from the get-go.”

Jaime Garcia (2-1) allowed a run on Harper’s sixth-inning groundout, but otherwise added to the offensive struggles of the Nationals, who have lost six consecutive home games and nine of their last 12 overall to fall to 10-11.

With his team averaging 2.9 runs over its past dozen games, Washington manager Davey Johnson said he would insert bench player Steve Lombardozzi in the lineup Thursday against Cincinnati and make other changes to the batting order.

”We’re just not doing the things we’re capable of doing right now,” Johnson said. ”It’ll change, but I’m going to have to jumble things up a little bit. Try to light a fire.”

The Nationals produced only four runs in this three-game set, a rematch of the 2012 NL division series won by St. Louis.

”We feel pretty comfortable against them,” Kozma said.

Needing to be nearly perfect given Washington’s lack of offense, Strasburg (1-4) improved considerably after that 12-minute first inning. Getting ahead in the count, he threw 110 pitches over seven innings, giving up no other runs and a total of five hits, along with seven strikeouts.

”I was trying to throw the perfect pitch. I tell myself going into the game, ‘Don’t do that.’ And I go out there and I do it,” said Strasburg, who hasn’t won since opening day against Miami. ”So I was really happy I was able to make the adjustment, get the feeling back. My velocity came back up, I was throwing a lot more strikes, and they weren’t taking as good swings.”

That initial inning, though, was precisely the sort of ”scratch and claw” offense that Cardinals manager Mike Matheny spoke about before the game.

”People hate our ‘small ball’ theory,” Matheny said, ”but when we’re not banging balls into the stands every single night, we’ve got to do other things, whether people like it or not.”

His club used that style to add an insurance run in the eighth off Drew Storen – who blew a ninth-inning lead against St. Louis in Game 5 in October – on Holliday’s chopped single that didn’t leave the infield.

”The thing that the Cardinals did is, they’ve got their boppers in the middle, but then they’ve got guys like Descalso and (Shane) Robinson and Kozma,” Strasburg said. ”They grind you out. They’re not going to give in. They’re not just going to strike out.”

The Nationals, meanwhile, went 0 for 7 with runners in scoring position. Trying to generate something for Washington’s slumbering offense, Ian Desmond bunted for a base hit with one out in the second, then stole second and advanced to third on a flyout to the warning track. But rookie third baseman Anthony Rendon struck out to end the inning.

Strasburg actually was the one who got Washington going at the plate, grounding a single up the middle to lead off the sixth. Denard Span followed with a single, and Jayson Werth’s groundout moved the runners up for Harper. He grounded out to second, but at least that got Strasburg home to make it 3-1.

A walk to Tyler Moore ended Garcia’s day after one run and four hits in 5 2-3 innings. Righty Joe Kelly entered to face Desmond, who struck out swinging, then flung his bat and helmet.

In the seventh, a pair of singles put runners at the corners with one out, but Kelly got out of that jam when pinch-hitter Lombardozzi struck out and Jhonatan Solano, taking off from first on a hit-and-run, was thrown out at second by catcher Molina.

Werth’s fourth homer, off Trevor Rosenthal in the eighth, gave Washington its second run. But that was too little to stop the Nationals from dropping below .500 for the first time since finishing the 2011 season 80-81.

”Somebody said last night it feels like we’re 0-20. But it’s not that bad. We’re only one game under .500, and it’s April. We’ll be all right,” Werth said. ”What we’re going through: It’s the first time this team has dealt with expectations, and there’s something to be said about that. But we’ll adjust.”

— Associated Press —

MWSU softball team stays No. 8 in Central Regional poll

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western Griffon softball team sits in 8th place in the second Central Regional Poll of the season which was released Wednesday (April 24) afternoon. The Griffons have won 18 of their last 22 games and enter the week with a 32-12 overall record and a 16-6 MIAA record.

The top eight teams earn a regional bid with the first and second seeds hosting four team regionals which will be played the first weekend in May. The #1 seed will host the #8, #4 and #5 seeds while the #2 seed will host the #7, #3 and the #6 seeds. The winners of each regional will take on each other in a best of three series the second weekend in May at the highest seed for a chance to go to the elite eight.

Four other MIAA schools are in the top 10 with Fort Hays State coming in 1st, Central Oklahoma 6th, Emporia State 9th and Truman State 10th.

The Griffons have been to a regional six of the last eight seasons (2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011 and 2012) which includes being the #4 seed in 2012.

The Griffons are set to play their final three doubleheaders of the regular season this week. The Griffons play their final home games tonight against the Lincoln Blue Tigers at 5:00 and 7:00 pm. The Griffons then travel to Oklahoma to take on the Central Oklahoma Bronchos and the Northeastern State RiverHawks. The Griffons take on the Bronchos on Saturday, April 27 in Edmond, Okla. and the RiverHawks on Sunday, April 28 in Tahlequah, Okla. Both doubleheaders are set for noon starts.

CENTRAL REGION
1 Fort Hays State
2 Southeastern Oklahoma
3 Winona State
4 Minnesota State Mankato
5 Augustana (S.D.)
6 Central Oklahoma
7 Minot State
8 Missouri Western State
9 Emporia State
10 Truman State

— MWSU Sports Information —

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