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Griffons rally at Central Oklahoma to snap four-game skid

Reed Mells hit a jumper with six seconds to play as Missouri Western came from behind picking up the win at Central Oklahoma. The Griffons snapped a four game losing streak and picked up its first MIAA victory of the season improving to 5-6 overall and 1-2 in MIAA play.

The first half did not go well for the Griffons as they got down ealry 8-2. The Bronchos kept up the pressure ending the half on a 31-20 run claiming the 44-30 halftime lead. The Griffons shot just 39.3-percent (11-28) from the field and 4-of-9 from the free throw line. Dylan Frantz had six points in the frame.

Josh Gibbs led the way for the Bronchos with 15 points while Jamell Cormier dumped in 10. UCO made 9-of-20 long range shots and 15-of-34 field goals.

The Griffons picked up the defense in the second half holding the Bronchos to just 27.6-percent (8-29) from the field and 2-of-11 from long range.

Missouri Western opened the half on a 10-2 run cutting the deficit to 46-43 after Flowers hit a layup with 17:22 to play in the game. UCO pushed its lead back to eight with 12:42 to play but MWSU used a 7-0 cutting the lead to one at 54-53 after a Jordan Yurth two point shot.

Once again the Bronchos pushed the lead back to nine at 64-55 with 8:17 to play after a James Watson jumper. The Griffons remained calm and back-to-back three’s by Flowers cut the lead to 70-67 with just under five to play. The Griffons capped off the 12-2 run with a Cedric Clinkscales jumper with 1:44 to play giving the Griffons a 76-72 lead.

Unfortunatly the game was far from over as a Spencer Smith three and two Seth Heckart free throws gave the Bronchos the lead back at 77-76 with 19 second to play.

Mell’s two point bucket with eight seconds to play and a steal by Adarius Fulton gave MWSU the victory. The Griffons shot .460 from the field and 51.7-percent (15-29) from the field. They also made 12-of-13 free throws in the second frame.

For the Griffons Flowers had 17 points while Fulton added 14 points and five steals. On the glass Dzenan Mrkajevic pulled down seven rebounds.

For the Bronchos Gibbs led all scorers with 20 points. Cormier and Smith each had 13 points in the contest. The Bronchos fall to 3-8 overall and 1-2 in MIAA play.

The Griffons return to action on Saturday, January 5 in Joplin, Mo. against Missouri Southern. Game time is set for 7:30 pm from Leggett & Platt Athletic Center.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bearcats escape with OT win at Missouri Southern

DeAngelo Hailey drove down the right side of the lane for a short jumper as Northwest Missouri State grabbed a 69-68 overtime win against Missouri Southern Thursday night in MIAA play.

The Bearcats improved to 10-2 on the season and stayed perfect in league play at 3-0. The Lions saw their four-game winning streak snapped and fell to 6-4 overall and 1-1 in the MIAA.

A game that came down to the wire last year, needed an extra five minutes of action to decide a winner Thursday night at the Leggett & Platt Athletic Center. A back-and-forth game saw 10 ties and 16 lead changes with the Bearcats eventually coming from behind in overtime for the win.

After battling 11 lead changes in the second half alone, junior Bryston Williams hit two free-throws with 22 seconds left in regulation to send the game into overtime.

In overtime Missouri Southern raced out to a six point lead, 66-60, aided by a trio of Bearcat turnovers.

However, with 2:58 left in overtime and after carrying the Bearcats much of the game, Dillon Starzl hit a jumper for Northwest’s first points in the extra period. The jumper gave the junior post a team high 20 points and sparked a 7-0 run for the Bearcats.

Grant Cozad would then hit one of two free throws as Northwest grabbed the rebound and gave him a second chance. This time Cozad hit both free throws with 1:33 left in the period putting Northwest ahead 67-66.

After Marquis Addison hit two free throws to give Missouri Southern the lead, the Bearcats would have the ball with eight seconds left setting up the final play.

The Lions had one final heave on a full court pass to Addison, but the guard was double teamed and the shot fell short at the buzzer.

For fourth-year Head Coach Ben McCollum it was his first win at Missouri Southern and just second against the Lions. His first came last year in the regular season finale at Bearcat Arena in a win that gave Northwest a share of the regular season title.

The Bearcats continue their January road swing with a quick turnaround on Saturday at Pittsburg State. Tipoff from John Lance Arena is set for 1:30 p.m. following the women’s game. The game is part of the CBS Sports Network NCAA Division II Game of the Week.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Ravens lose in overtime against Culver-Stockton

It took a streaking 3-point shooting second half by Culver-Stockton College on Thursday night to force overtime with Benedictine inside the Ralph Nolan Gymnasium.

In the end, Culver-Stockton (13-3, 4-0 HAAC) outscored Benedictine (9-5; 1-2 HAAC) 11-7 in overtime to earn a 85-81 win.

Benedictine limited one of the NAIA’s top 3-point shooting teams to just three 3-pointers in the first half as the Ravens held a 31-29 lead over the Wildcats.

In the second half, Benedictine built as much as a 11 point lead before Culver-Stockton took fire from beyond the arc.

The Wildcats converted on six 3-pointers in the second half and two more in overtime to pull away from the Ravens.

Benedictine forward Charlie Wallrapp and Culver-Stockton guard Austin Keaton finished with a game-high 23 points.

The Ravens hit the road on Saturday for a 4 p.m. showdown in Olathe against NAIA Div. I No. 13 MNU inside the Cook Center on the MNU campus.

— BC Sports Information —

Missouri Western women hang on to win at Central Oklahoma

The Missouri Western women’s basketball team hit 18-of-20 second half free throws opening up the new year with a 78-76 road victory over MIAA newcomer Central Oklahoma. Heather Howard collected her seventh double double dumping in a season high 24 points and tying her season high with 13 rebounds. The Griffons improve to 9-2 overall and 2-1 MIAA play.

Howard came out on fire scoring 10 of the Griffons first 16 points. She hit two free throws with 12:22 to play in the first half which gave the Griffons it’s largest lead of the game at 16-6. The rest of the half belonged to the Bronchos as they started to chip away at the Griffon lead. UCO eventually caught the Griffons when Jill Bryan hit a three as time expired tying the score at 33 heading to into the locker room.

The Griffons scored 17 points off 14 first half UCO turnovers. Howard had 16 points on 6-of-11 shooting while Lanicia Lawrence had six assists and three steals. The Griffons had 24 rebounds with eight coming on the offensive end of the floor. Howard led the way with six.

The Bronchos were led by Bryan with 10 points while they made just 12-of-31 field goals.

The second half was a back and forth battle with six ties and six lead changes. The Griffons opened the half scoring seven of the first ten points giving the Griffons a 40-36 lead after an Alicia Bell layup with 18:10 to play. The Griffons and UCO continued to play close and with 6:10 to play in the game newcomer Denise White put the Griffons up 63-58 after a free throw.

UCO remained calm cutting the Griffon lead to one after a Savannah Hamilton free throw with 3:55 to play. Sharniece Lewis pushed the Griffon lead to five once again with 2:31 to play after a long range shot giving the Griffons the 73-68 lead. UCO cut the lead to two five made free throws, four by Lawrence sealed the victory for the visiting Griffons.

Three other Griffons besides Howard scored in double digits. Lawrence, Alicia Bell and Tiffanie Abrams scored 12, 10 and 11 respectively. Bell had nine rebounds while Lawrence finished with 12 assists. The Griffons shot 41-percent (25-61) from the field and 76.7-percent (23-30) from the free throw line.

The Bronchos fall to 8-3 overall and 1-2 in MIAA play. Bryan finished with 19 points while MacKenzie Solberg scored 10.

The Griffons return to action on Saturday, January 5 with a MIAA game in Joplin, Mo. against Missouri Southern. Game time is set for 5:30 pm from Leggett & Platt Athletic Center.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Northwest women fall at Southern for first MIAA loss

The Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team could not overcome a cold shooting night as they fell to Missouri Southern 64-55 Thursday night in MIAA action.

The Bearcats dropped their first league game to move to 2-1, as their four-game winning streak also came to an end. Northwest fell to 8-3 on the season as Missouri Southern improved to 7-3 overall and 1-1 in league play.

Missouri Southern out-rebounded the Bearcats 25-6 in the first half, but 18 Lion turnovers gave Northwest a 28-25 lead at intermission.

However, in the end, it was the bigger team that pulled out the victory Thursday, as Northwest managed to only shoot 31 percent from the field on the night with one player in double figures.

Ashleigh Nelson finished with a team-high 12 points.

Northwest held a slim lead most of the second half before the Lions went on a 12-2 run and took a 10-point lead with just under four minutes left in the game. The Bearcats would slowly chip away in the final minutes, but crucial free-throws down the stretch helped the Lions seal the victory.

The Bearcats found opportunities at the free-throw line as well, although the cold shooting extended to the charity stripe. Northwest shot just 21-of-33 from the free-throw line as the woes plagued the Bearcats on the glass, losing the rebounding battle 44-23.

Four different Lions scored in double figures as they were led by Tee Singleton with 13 points.

The Bearcats continue their January road swing with a quick turnaround on Saturday at Pittsburg State. Tipoff from John Lance Arena is set for 11:30 a.m. as the game is part of the CBS Sports Network NCAA Division II Game of the Week.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

No. 22 Benedictine women cruise past Culver-Stockton

The No. 22-ranked Benedictine College women’s basketball team improved to 3-0 in conference play on Thursday night with a 71-47 win over Culver-Stockton College.

Benedictine (13-2, 3-0 HAAC) used a 50-percent shooting effort in the first half to lead Culver (5-9; 0-4 HAAC) 39-23 at the half.

The Ravens outscored the Wildcats bench 38-6 thanks in large part to the team-high 16 points of guard Rosie Youngstrom.

Culver-Stockton was led by the game-high 25 points of guard Mimi Reaves.

Benedictine hits the road on Saturday for a battle of NAIA Div. I Top 25 programs as they travel to Olathe, to take on No. 11 MNU at 2 p.m.

— BC Sports Information —

Royals sign LHP Blaine Boyer to minor league contract

The Kansas City Royals announced Thursday the club has signed right-handed pitcher Blaine Boyer to a minor league contract for 2013.  The Royals plan to announce the club’s Major League camp non-roster invitees at a later date.

Boyer, 31, is 9-14 with a 4.81 ERA in 233 Major League relief appearances for the Braves (2005-09), Cardinals (2009), Diamondbacks (2009-10) and Mets (2011).  The 6-foot-3, 245-pounder from Murietta, Ga., is a groundball specialist, allowing just 17 home runs in 234.0 innings.

— Royals Media Relations —

Chiefs fire head coach Romeo Crennel; Pioli in limbo

The Kansas City Chiefs fired coach Romeo Crennel on Monday, but made no move on embattled general manager Scott Pioli despite a 2-14 season marked by blowout losses, fan rebellion and a murder-suicide involving one of their players.

Crennel was fired after one full season as coach, and one day after Kansas City matched the fewest wins in franchise history with an embarrassing 38-3 loss to the Denver Broncos.

“I am embarrassed by the poor product we gave our fans this season, and I believe we have no choice but to move the franchise in a different direction,” Chiefs chairman Clark Hunt said in a statement. “I will immediately begin the search for the next head coach of the Chiefs. The entire football operation will remain under review and there may be additional changes to come.”

Hunt said that “no final determination has been made” about Pioli’s future.

The Chiefs’ only victories this season came against New Orleans and Carolina, the latter coming one day after linebacker Jovan Belcher shot his girlfriend to death and then drove to the team’s practice facility and turned the gun on himself as Crennel and Pioli looked on.

Crennel seemed to know the end was coming Sunday night when he was asked to defend his job and said, “If your criteria is wins and losses, there’s not much defense.”

Kansas City will have the No. 1 pick in the draft after the most disappointing season in its 53-year history. The only other time the Chiefs finished 2-14 was 2008, the year before Pioli was hired. They were 2-12 in 1977, the only other time they’ve failed to win at least three games.

“Words can’t describe it, to be honest with you,” cornerback Brandon Flowers said. “We have to do the best we can to block this out and start from scratch next year.”

With five players voted to the Pro Bowl last week, there are certainly pieces in place for the Chiefs to make rapid improvement. But four of them were inherited by Pioli’s regime, and that haul of Pro Bowl players may have been Crennel’s biggest indictment.

The only other teams with at least five players voted to the all-star game made the playoffs.

The Chiefs’ inept offense managed 18 touchdowns in 16 games, finished minus-24 in turnover ratio and lost nine times by two touchdowns or more. Along the way, they broke an 83-year-old NFL record by not holding a lead in regulation until their ninth game.

Crennel, whose career record as a head coach is 28-55, was hired in 2010 to be the Chiefs’ defensive coordinator. Respected by his players, he was appointed interim coach last December when Pioli fired Todd Haley with three games left in the season.

Crennel immediately brought a sense of stability to a floundering franchise, defeating the previously unbeaten Green Bay Packers and winning at Denver in the season finale – after which, players spontaneously started chanting his name in the visiting locker room.

“That’s my guy. Everybody knows that,” defensive tackle Shaun Smith said. “That’s not only my coach, that’s my role model. My father figure. We don’t just talk football, we talk life.”

With the support of the players, Pioli made Crennel the permanent coach a few weeks later, giving him another opportunity as a head coach after going 24-40 in four seasons with the Browns.

The season wound up being a disappointment from the start.

The Chiefs were blown out by the Falcons in their opener, trounced on the road by the Bills and needed an 18-point comeback to force overtime in their win over the Saints.

Then a stretch of eight consecutive defeats.

Empty seats began to multiply at Arrowhead Stadium, once one of the most intimidating venues in the NFL. An organized fan rebellion paid for banners to be towed behind airplanes asking for Pioli to be fired, and the majority of fans dressed in black for a home game against Cincinnati.

Nothing Crennel did seemed to work, either.

He began the season as the defensive coordinator, but fired himself and turned those duties over to linebackers coach Gary Gibbs. He benched Matt Cassel, in the fourth year of a $63 million contract, and went with Brady Quinn, who played just as poorly the rest of the season.

Injuries were numerous, turnovers plentiful, penalties crippling and blown assignments became the hallmark of a team that was rarely in games into the fourth quarter.

Then came the morning of Dec. 1, when tragedy struck.

Belcher, a part-time starter, shot the mother of his 3-month-old daughter, Kasandra Perkins, multiple times at a home not far from Arrowhead Stadium. The linebacker then sped to the team’s practice facility and was confronted by Pioli, who tried to talk him out of more violence.

After thanking Pioli and Crennel for his chance in the NFL, Belcher shot himself in the head.

The Chiefs played the following day against Carolina, and Crennel was praised for the way he stoically led a team in turmoil. Kansas City put together its best performance in a 27-21 victory.

It wound up being their last win, though.

The Chiefs were blown out by Cleveland, shut out by Oakland and beaten by the Colts before an embarrassing season finale against the Broncos.

It was enough to finish Crennel, and enough to put Pioli’s future in jeopardy.

“I want our fans to know that I will do everything I can to provide them a dramatically better team,” Hunt said, “both next season and in the seasons to come.”

— Associated Press —

Snyder named 2012 Dodd Coach of the Year

For the fifth time in his career, Kansas State’s Bill Snyder has been named national coach of the year as the legendary head coach earned the prestigious 2012 Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award Monday, the foundation announced during halftime of the Chick-fil-A Bowl.

The annual Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year presented by the Chick-fil-A Bowl winner is determined by a vote from all previous winners of the award, plus a vote from a blue-ribbon panel made up from the “who’s who” in college football.

“The entire K-State family congratulates Coach Snyder on being named the Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year,” said Athletics Director John Currie. “What makes this award even more special is its focus on character and academic excellence, in addition to a team’s success on the field, and Coach Snyder is the epitome of those values.”

Predicted to finish sixth in the Big 12 prior to the season, the Wildcats tallied an 11-1 record, including an 8-1 mark in Big 12 play to capture the school’s third conference championship and first since 2003. Snyder guided Kansas State to its seventh 11-win season, but only the second 11-win regular season (1998).

In addition being named the 2012 Big 12 Coach of the Year by both the Associated Press and his fellow coaches, Snyder was also named a finalist for the Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award for the second straight season as well as being a finalist for the Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award and a semifinalist for the Maxwell Coach of the Year Award. The legendary coach was also the 1998 recipient of the Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award.

Snyder led K-State to a school-record six wins against ranked opponents in 2012, including its conference-championship clinching victory over No. 18 Texas. Additionally, the Wildcats obtained their first-ever No. 1 ranking the BCS standings earlier this year.

Named the 32nd head football coach at K-State on November 30, 1988, and again as the 34th on November 24, 2008, Snyder has amassed a 170-84-1 (.669) record during his tenure with the Wildcats, including an 97-65-1 (.598) mark in Big 8/12 games. His 170 victories are the 11th-most among active FBS coaches and are more than triple the man in second place on K-State’s all-time coaching victories list.

The Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award was established in 1976 to honor the NCAA Division 1 football coach whose program represents the highest ideals on and off the field. The Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award honors the coach of a team which enjoys a successful football season, while also stressing the importance of academic excellence and character, as did Coach Dodd’s teams during his 22 years as head football coach of the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets.

The formal presentation of the 2012 Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award presented by the Chick-fil-A Bowl to Coach Snyder will be made on the Kansas State University campus later this spring.

No. 5 Kansas State faces fourth-ranked Oregon (11-1, 8-1 Pac-12) in the 2013 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl on January 3, in Glendale, Ariz. The game will kick off at 7:30 p.m. (CT) at University of Phoenix Stadium and will be televised by ESPN.

— KSU Sports Information —

Royals sign OF Endy Chavez to minor league contract

The Kansas City Royals announced Monday the club has signed outfielder Endy Chavez to a minor league contract for 2013.  The Royals plan to announce the club’s Major League camp non-roster invitees at a later date.

Chavez, 34, is an 11-year Major League veteran.  He made his debut in 2001 with Kansas City after the Royals selected him from the New York Mets organization in the 2000 Rule 5 Draft.

The 6-foot resident of Valencia, Venezuela, is a career .269 hitter with 118 doubles, 32 triples, 26 home runs, 229 RBI, 341 runs and 100 stolen bases for the Royals (2001), Expos (2002-04), Nationals (2005), Phillies (2005), Mets (2006-08), Mariners (2009), Rangers (2011) and Orioles (2012).

The left-handed hitting and throwing outfielder appeared in 64 regular season games with Baltimore last season, also playing in three Division Series games against the Yankees.

— Royals Media Relations —

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