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K-State’s Finney named semifinalist for Burlsworth Trophy

Kansas State sophomore center B.J. Finney is one of 10 semifinalists for the Burlsworth Trophy, the award’s selection committee announced Tuesday.

Finney is the first K-State player to be named a semifinalist for the award, which is given to the most outstanding football player in America that began his career as a walk-on. He is also the only sophomore semifinalist as the list features seven seniors and two juniors.

A two-year starter, Finney is the anchor of a Wildcat offensive line that has helped K-State rank 10th nationally in scoring offense at 40.5 points per game, while the Wildcats are fifth nationally with 36 rushing touchdowns. The Andale, Kan., product, who is also a candidate for the Rimington Trophy as the nation’s top center, has started each of the last 24 games dating back to last season, including the last 23 at center.

A walk-on prior to the 2010 season, Finney was named Kansas State’s Red Raider Award winner that year as the top contributor on the scout squad.

The Burlsworth Trophy is named in honor of Brandon Burlsworth. Without one Division I scholarship offer, Brandon walked on to Arkansas in 1994, worked his way to being a three-year starter and was eventually named an All-American in 1998. Burlsworth was selected as the 63rd overall pick by the Indianapolis Colts in the 1999 NFL Draft but was tragically killed in a car accident 11 days later.

Following an off week, No. 6 Kansas State (10-1, 7-1 Big 12) will host 15th-ranked Texas (8-2, 5-2) on Saturday, December 1, at Bill Snyder Family Stadium.

— KSU Sports Information —

Royals sign Jeremy Guthrie to three-year deal

The Kansas City Royals announced Tuesday that the club has signed right-handed starting pitcher Jeremy Guthrie to a three-year Major League contract through the 2015 season.  Consistent with club policy, terms of the contract were not disclosed.

Guthrie, 33, went 5-3 with a 3.16 ERA in 14 starts for the Royals after Kansas City acquired him from the Colorado Rockies on July 20 in exchange for pitcher Jonathan Sanchez.  The Royals went 10-4 in his starts, including winning 10 of the final 11.  Guthrie personally ended the campaign on a career-best five-game winning streak.  He was 4-0 with a 2.17 ERA in his final 11 starts, posting the seventh-best ERA in baseball and the third-best in the American League from August 8 to the end of the season.  Guthrie especially enjoyed pitching at Kauffman Stadium where he posted a 4-2 record with a 2.40 ERA in nine outings.

A workhorse throughout his career, Guthrie last season fell just 18.1 innings shy of recording his fourth-consecutive 200-inning season and he has averaged 198.0 innings over his last five seasons.  Jeremy is 55-77 with a 4.28 ERA in 210 career appearances, including 183 starts, for the Indians (2004-06), Orioles (2007-11), Rockies (2012) and Royals (2012).

— Royals Media Relations —

Missouri Western RB Michael Hill named finalist for Harlon Hill Award

Missouri Western senior running back Michael Hill has been named one of the eight finalists for the 2012 Harlon Hill Trophy as the NCAA Division II Player of the Year. The eight have been trimmed from a field of 24 candidates after regional voting. Two players from each of the four regions made it into the top eight. The other player out of Region 3 is Henderson State quarterback Kevin Rodgers.

The finalists were selected by the NCAA Division II sports information directors in regional voting and will now be placed on the national ballot where all 155 of the division’s SIDs will select the award’s 27th winner. The top two players from each of Division II’s Super Regions advanced to the national ballot.

The list of 2012 finalists is comprised of four quarterbacks, three running backs and one receiver. Six of the finalists helped lead their teams into the NCAA Division II playoffs this season and two of this weekend’s second round playoff matchups will have Hill finalists facing each other.

Advancing from Super Region 1 are junior running back Franklyn Quiteh of Bloomsburg University (Pa.) and junior quarterback Zach Zulli of Shippensburg University (Pa.).

Super Region 2 is represented by senior wide receiver Chris Bowden of Wingate University (N.C.) and senior tailback Derrick Washington of Tuskegee University (Ala.).

Advancing from Super Region 4 are senior quarterback Taylor Housewright of Ashland University (Ohio) and junior quarterback Dustin Vaughan of West Texas A&M University. They will also face off Saturday in the Division II playoffs.

The winner of the 2012 award, which is presented by the National Harlon Hill Award Committee, will be announced at the 27th annual Harlon Hill Trophy Presentation Banquet on Friday, December 14 at the Marriott Shoals Conference Center at 6:30 p.m. This year’s Hill Trophy Banquet will also include the 14th induction into the Division II Football Hall of Fame.

Tickets are $50 each or $400 for a table of eight and can be purchased by calling the Shoals Chamber of Commerce at (256) 764-4661. The NCAA Division II Championship Game is scheduled for December 15 at Florence’s Braly Municipal Stadium at noon. The Hill Trophy is sponsored by the City of Florence, Ala., Florence- Lauderdale Tourism, Opti-Net, the Marriott Shoals Hotel and Spa and Herff Jones.

Hill, from St. Joseph, Mo., is the 2012 Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MIAA) Offensive Player of the
Year after helping lead Missouri Western to an 11-1 record, an MIAA championship and into the second round of the Division II playoffs. He rushed for 187 yards on 24 carries last weekend in leading the Griffons to a three-overtime win over Minnesota-Duluth in an opening round playoff game and now has 1,996 rushing yards on 269 carries this season. He has carried the ball 269 times and averages 7.4 yards per carry and 166.3 yards per game. He has added 16 pass receptions for 186 yards and three scores.

Presently this campaign Hill has been the Griffons work horse…Hill has rushed for over 100 yards in 11 of the Griffons 12 games which includes rushing for over 150 yards eight times and 200 twice…He was the MIAA Offensive Player of the Year and First Team All-MIAA…he has helped the Griffons to an 11-1 record which most victories in a season for the Griffons…He has also helped the Griffons to their first ever playoff victory last weekend over Minnesota-Duluth 59-57 in triple overtime…he had a career high 259 yards and three touchdowns in a 56-28 victory over Washburn…has helped the Griffons win five straight games against top-25 opponents…helped the Griffons open up 6-0 for the first time ever under head coach Jerry Partridge and the first time since 1981…helped the Griffons win two straight road games against teams that were ranked in the top-25 for the first time ever…beat #7 Pittsburg State 63-14 and #15 Emporia State 57-28…Hill had four touchdowns against Pittsburg State and two against Emporia State…the Griffons secured a school record 11 victories  this season and nine or more for the seventh time in ten years…rushed for a career long 92 yard touchdown against William Jewell College…has had a rush for over 20 yards in 11 of the Griffons 12 games this season…had 183 yards in the first half against Emporia State…has rushed for over 180 yards six times and has had over 200 all purpose yards five times…has 1,996 yards rushing this season…would be only the 7th player ever in the MIAA to rush for over 2,000 yards in a season.

Leads the MIAA and is 2nd in the nation averaging 166.3 rushing yards per game…is second in the MIAA and tied for 22nd in the nation in scoring average at 9.0 points per game…has scored the most touchdowns in the MIAA with 15…is second in the MIAA and 8th in the nation averaging 181.8 yards per game…has helped the Griffons as a team rush for a league leading 282.2 yards per game which is also 7th in the nation…has helped the Griffons score 43.9 points per game which is 6th n the nation and first in the MIAA…rushed for or caught a touchdown in nine games this season…on the verge of setting records for most points scored in a season and career, most touchdowns scored in a season and career, most rushing attempts in a season and most rushing touchdowns in a season and career…his 166.3 yards per game is the best by a Griffon in a single season and he has set the record for most 100-yards rushing games in a career with 19…He has rushed for over 100 yards 11 times this season which ties the record for most in a season…Hill leads the MIAA in rushing, scoring, touchdowns scored and is second in all-purpose yards.

MWSU’s all-time leader in rushing with 4,797 career yards…he is the Griffons leader in all-purpose yards with 5,645…he has the record for most carries in a career with 886 and most carries in a game with 41…helped the Griffons break the single game yards per rush average of 9.7…the old record was 7.8…his 18 touchdowns this season ties a record for most in a single season…has 15 rushing touchdowns and is two away from tying the single season record…has 43 total touchdowns and is three away from tying the school record in a career…his 34 rushing touchdowns ties the record for most rushing touchdowns in a career…is averaging 166.3 yards per game which is a single season record if it holds up…is four points away from breaking the single season record for points in a season…had a career high four touchdowns against Pittsburg State this season which is one off the record for a single game…has the second and third highest mark for rushing yards in a game with 259 against Washburn in 2012 and 246 against Southwest Baptist in 2011…holds the record for most rushing yards in a season, currently has 1,996 and has the highest rushing average in a season at 7.4…is 27 carries away for getting the most carries in a season..2012: MIAA Offensive Player of the Year and First Team All-MIAA running back. 2011 Award List • MIAA Offensive Player of the Week on October 31, 2011 • First Team all-MIAA • Second Team Daktronics Super Region Four • Second Team Don Hansen Super Region Four • Honorable Mention Don Hansen all-American • Honorable Mention Beyond Sports Network all-American 2010 Awards honorable mention All-MIAA

Has helped the Griffons break the school record for highest average per rush in a game…MWSU averaged 9.7 against William Jewell which broke the old mark of 7.8…has helped the Griffons average 282.2 yards per game which would be a team record…the old record is 269.5 which was set in 1989…has helped the Griffon offense set records for Most Points Scored (527), Highest Scoring Average (43.9), Most Touchdown Scored (71), Most First Downs (284), Most Yards Gained (5,740), Most Yards Total Offense Per Game (478.3), Most Yards Gained Rushing (3,641), Most Rushing Yards Net (3,386), Most Rushing Yards Gained Per Game (282.2), Highest Rushing Average Per Carry (6.4) and Highest Completion Percentage in a Season (65-percent)….the Griffons have won nine or more games in seven of the last 10 seasons…the 11 victories is a single season record…helped the Griffons to three NCAA Division II Playoff Appearances and a Mineral Water Bowl appearance.

Fall 2008- MWSU Dean List ! for (3.5-3.99 GPA) Spring 2009 – MWUU Athletic Director Honor Roll (3.0-3.49 GPA) Spring 2012 – MWSU Athletic Director Honor Roll (3.0-3.49 GPA)

The Griffons will play in the second round of the Division II Playoffs on Saturday, Novmeber 24 against the Henderson State Reddies in Arkadelphia, Ark. Game time is scheduled for 12:00 pm.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Chiefs drop seventh straight as they get blown out by Bengals

The Bengals punt team trotted onto the field midway through the first quarter Sunday, shortly after the Chiefs had kicked a field goal to take a rare lead in a game.

All the momentum was going Kansas City’s way.

Then the snap landed in the hands of Cedric Peerman, who was lined up to protect punter Kevin Huber. The running back raced around the side of the line, the perfectly executed fake catching the Chiefs napping, and 32 yards later gave Cincinnati a first down.

New life, too. The Bengals would convert another fourth down on the same series, and Andy Dalton would hit A.J. Green with a short touchdown pass to cap it off, giving Cincinnati a lead it would never relinquish in a 28-6 victory on Sunday.

”It was a momentum-swinger,” running back BenJarvus Green-Ellis said. ”That’s the thing about the NFL – most of the games are decided by a few points. When you get a momentum-swinger like that where you punch them right in the gut, it swings the momentum going your way.”

Dalton wound up with 230 yards passing, including another TD throw to Mohamed Sanu, and also scampered for a score. Green had six catches for 91 yards, and Green-Ellis bullied his way for 101 yards and a touchdown on the ground as the Bengals (5-5) won their second straight.

Cincinnati plays its next four games against teams that began the day with losing records.

None of them are as bad as the Chiefs, though.

Jamaal Charles had 87 yards rushing for Kansas City (1-9), but that was the only highlight for a team that lost its seventh straight amid a gloomy backdrop at Arrowhead Stadium.

The Chiefs’ once-raucous home venue was only about half-full most of the game, and a good portion of those who showed up were dressed in black – a grass roots effort organized by fans who have been trying to pressure team ownership to clean out the front office.

”I focus on the game. I don’t get into the crowd,” Chiefs coach Romeo Crennel said.

Perhaps he should have let his eyes wander.

What happened on the field couldn’t have put him in a good mood.

Dalton and Green shredded Crennel’s porous pass defense, Ellis pounded away at a front line that had played better of late, and a middle-of-the-road Cincinnati defense looked like an iron curtain against a Kansas City offense that has been utterly inept.

The result: The Bengals are back to .500, and eying back-to-back postseason appearances for only the second time in franchise history, while the Chiefs have dropped seven straight games in a single season for the first time since Oct. 5-Nov. 23, 2008.

”We felt like we gave a couple of games away,” said Dalton, who had four TD passes in last week’s win over the Giants. ”Now we’ve got momentum and we’ve got to keep it going. We’ve had two great wins, full-team wins, with everybody doing their part, and we’ve got to keep that going.”

The Chiefs struck first for the second straight week, turning several nice runs by Charles into a 34-yard field goal by Ryan Succop, before reality set in again.

That’s when the Bengals pulled off their faked punt, converted another fourth down and then saw Dalton cap the drive with a 5-yard fade pass to Green, who managed to stab the ball with one hand and then slap both feet into the end zone before falling out of bounds.

Peyton Hillis fumbled on the Chiefs’ ensuing possession, their league-leading 31st turnover this season, but they dodged trouble when Mike Nugent missed a 50-yard field-goal attempt.

Cincinnati made it 14-3 later in the second quarter when Dalton fooled the entire Kansas City defense on a perfectly executed naked bootleg. The 1-yard TD run came on fourth down after a video review showed that Gresham had been stopped just shy of the goal line on a 10-yard catch.

The Bengals’ most impressive drive of the game came after they forced the Chiefs to punt for the third straight time, an 11-play, 78-yard masterpiece in which they faced third down once.

Ellis capped that one off with a short touchdown plunge for a 21-3 lead.

Matt Cassel deftly led the Chiefs to a field goal in the closing seconds of the half, but Crennel elected to put backup Brady Quinn into the game at quarterback to start the third quarter.

Cassel sustained a concussion earlier this season, and then lost his job to Quinn, who was active for the first time since sustaining his own concussion Oct. 28 against Oakland.

Quinn didn’t fare much better leading the Kansas City offense, and the Bengals tacked on Sanu’s touchdown catch in the fourth quarter to seal the win.

”We did good things in all three phases,” Bengals coach Marvin Lewis said. ”We knew it was going to be a grind. We can’t worry about things around us. We just have to take care of us.”

— Associated Press —

Griffons win 3 OT thriller against Minnesota-Duluth for first playoff win

Missouri Western’s magical run during the 2012 football season continued Saturday afternoon at Spratt Stadium.

Behind entering the fourth quarter, the Griffons came back and tied it twice, and won the game in three overtimes, defeating 2010 National Champions Minnesota-Duluth 57-55. Chase Vogler, who finished the game with 184 rushing yards and 195 passing, tripped as he snapped the ball to try and tie the game in the third overtime period.

The Griffons started out the playoff match the same way as they did in 2011, with a turnover.

Vogler through a pass to the Joe Reichert, but the wide-out couldn’t haul it in and it tipped over his head and landed into safety Marc Harrison’s hands. Harrison took the ball into Duluth territory, and the offense did the rest.

Travis Partridge nailed Tyron Crockom on the right sideline, and Crockom went forward to the end zone for a 21-yard touchdown. Missouri Western led 7-0 after with 12 minutes and 35 seconds to go in the first quarter.

After a Bulldogs field goal, the Griffons went right back to the air, and Partridge hit Reggie Jordan in the end zone for an 8-yard score to mark the game 14-3 with 5:08 left in the first. Duluth knocked another field goal in before the quarter, and went into the second stanza behind 14-6.

The Bulldogs scored two times in the second quarter, which started after the Bulldogs forced a Griffon turnover in the red zone, to take a 20-14 lead. Duluth failed on a 42-yard field goal at the end of the half, however, and the Griffons recovered in the second half.

Michael Hill, who finished the game with 187 rushing yards, dashed two big runs out on the opening drive of the half. Partridge hit Kyle Knox for a 16-yard touchdown and his third of the game to put the Griffons up 21-20.

Duluth snatched the lead right back as Vogler ran the ball in for a 1-yard score. The Bulldogs then went for a two-point conversion, and Vogler nailed tight end Ben Helmer across the middle to go ahead 28-21.

Starting the fourth quarter, MWSU tied the game as Partridge dropped back then sprinted forward for a 9-yard touchdown. But Duluth answered with Austin Sikorski’s 1-yard run to make it 35-28.

The Griffons drove right back down field, and went 13 plays for 73 yards, finishing off the drive with Partridge’s 1-yard score with 5:17 to play. That’s when the defense stepped up.

Duluth traveled inside the 25-yard line, but David Bass sacked Volger on third down, followed by a fourth-down conversion that came up short for the Bulldogs, forcing the action into an extra quarter.

In overtime, Hill dashed in a 7-yad touchdown to give the Griffons a 42-35 lead. A few plays later, Sikorski pounded in a 2-yard score to tie the game up at 42.

Duluth took over again to start the second period, and Sikorski powered his way in for a 4-yard touchdown. Partridge answered with a 1-yard score of his own to tie the game at 49.

Entering the third overtime and needing a 2-point conversion from there-on, Partridge scored his seventh touchdown of the game, and fourth on the ground. He then hit up Jordan in the end zone for the extra two to mark the game 57-49.

Duluth needed a score and another, and ran Sikorski in for his fifth touchdown to make it 57-55. That’s when Vogler tripped under center as the Griffons stormed the field in excitement, winning their first playoff game in school history.

Partridge finished going 24-for-33 with three touchdowns. Downing had six catches for 144 yards. Knox, Crockom, Wright and Jordan all had multiple catches to help the Griffons win.

Harrison had a huge day defensively, totaling 12 tackles with the one interception. Bass had 11 tackles with one sack.

It was the first overtime win for the Griffons since Aug. 31, 2006 when MWSU defeated Central Oklahoma 32-29 in double-overtime.

Up Next: The Griffons move on and play No. 2 seeded Henderson State in Arkadelphia, Ark. on Saturday, Nov. 24. Kickoff is set for noon.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bearcats open playoffs with shutout of Harding

Jordan Simmons could only stand and watch from the Northwest Missouri State sideline, his broken left arm in a brace.

Teammate James Franklin would join him a little later, taking a helmet to the back on the first play from scrimmage, retreating to the locker room and reappearing on crutches.

Minus their best all-purpose back and their leading rusher, the Bearcats not only didn’t break Saturday. They thrived. Onetime walk-on Billy Creason stepped in with the second 100-yard rushing game of his career, Trevor Adams threw for two touchdowns and Northwest’s defense kept the nation’s fifth-best rushing attack out of the end zone in a 35-0 win in the first round of the NCAA’s Division II playoffs.

“It was,” Adams said, “a really good job of guys stepping up and taking care of business.”

The Bearcats (10-2) are part of the playoffs for the ninth time in as many years, the longest current streak in Division II, and now have reached the second round a ninth consecutive time. That’s the second-longest streak in D-II history; Grand Valley State made it at least that far in 10 consecutive years from 2001-10 – the first three under Brian Kelly, who went on to coach at Central Michigan, then at Cincinnati and now is the architect of Notre Dame’s perfect season.

Northwest will hit the road next Saturday to unbeaten Minnesota State Mankato, the top-seeded team in the NCAA’s Super Region 3. Kickoff is slated for noon in Mankato, Minn.

“I love coaching a game like that. Our kids love playing games like that,” Northwest coach Adam Dorrel said of the matchup. “We have absolutely nothing to lose … and we’re going to approach the game like that, and we’re going to play like that on Saturday.”

He said indications from Northwest’s medical personnel are that both Simmons and Franklin, who’s injury wasn’t specified, should be able to play at Mankato, though Simmons’ forearm break required the insertion of six screws during his Wednesday surgery. He was hurt during practice a day earlier.

Franklin, who’d run for 12 TDs and turned in the Bearcats’ only 100-yard performance prior to postseason, picked up 11 yards on his only carry against Harding. He stayed in the game for one more play – a pass incompletion thrown his way – and then pulled himself from the lineup.

It was a tough afternoon in Bearcat Stadium for running backs all-around. Harding lost its first-string fullback, Romo Westbrook, to an ankle injury on the Bisons’ first play from scrimmage and second-stringer D’Nico Jackson-Best to another ankle injury a little before halftime. That forced the move of Bisons quarterback Kelvin Martin, a former backup fullback, to fullback in the second half.

Their triple-option Flexbone picked up 304 yards on the ground, the most the Bearcats have allowed this season, but managed only a little more than four yards a carry and 126 of those yards in the second half. Their passing game, meanwhile, netted minus-four yards and surrendered a couple of interceptions.

“The best team won today,” Harding coach Ronnie Huckeba said, but added in respect to the injuries, “I think we’re closer than that score indicated.”

Northwest had the depth to deal with its losses. And it had the diversification.

Creason ran for 34 of the 70 yards that the Bearcats covered on their opening possession, including a final, fourth-and-goal dive for a touchdown that gave them a quick and important lead. Adams’ 14-yard scoring pass to John Hinchey made it 14-0 early in the second quarter. And another fill-in running back, junior Kohlman Adema-Schulte rumbled six yards off tackle just before halftime for his first TD of the season and the second of his career.

Creason finished with 113 yards rushing, becoming the first back to crack 100 against Harding this season. The Bisons (9-2) had allowed teams an average of just a little more than 88 yards in their previous 10 games.

Adema-Schulte added 22 rushing yards.

“I think they expected to play a little bit today but not as much as they did, and they played really, really well,” Dorrel said. “Anytime you can do that, I think it’s just special. I think it says a lot about the character of the kid.”

Simmons’ injury earlier in the week had put Creason, in particular, on notice. The fifth-year junior from Grain Valley, Mo., was Northwest’s third-leading rusher as a freshman walk-on but he’d been slowed by injuries the past two seasons.

He has played in all 12 games this season, and has rushed for 377 yards.

“I was pretty nervous because I haven’t gotten that much PT (playing time) in a while at running back,” Creason said. “…But once I got settled down, I got really comfortable. And it was awesome.”

It was more of a struggle for Harding’s stricken offense – a lot of it because of the Northwest defense, some of it the Bisons’ own doing.

They threatened to immediately answer Creason’s early touchdown, driving 72 yards to the Northwest 6, but Martin – still at quarterback – fumbled the ball away. A failed fake field goal in the second quarter lost three yards. An illegal formation penalty wiped out a 55-yard TD run near the end of the half.

Behind sophomore backup quarterback Keenan Kellett, the Bisons reached the Northwest 32 in the fourth quarter. But a personal foul penalty set them back, and a gadget-play pass by running back Donatella Luckett was intercepted by the Bearcats’ Brandon Dixon.

Nate DeJong intercepted Kellett just two minutes later, the senior safety’s seventh pick in eight games, setting up 26-yard pass from Adams to Tyler Shaw that made it 28-0.

Backup quarterback Brady Bolles got Northwest Missouri State’s final score on a four-yard run with a little less than three minutes left, capping an eight-play, 63-yard drive.

Adams and Shaw also were instrumental in covering for the missing running backs, connecting on five passes for 24, 19, 35, 15 and 26 yards. Adams finished 17-for-25 for 212 yards and the two TDs. Team-wide, it was an impressive performance of an unsettling week – a one-point, MIAA-deciding loss to arch rival Missouri Western the previous Saturday, then Simmons’ broken arm on the practice field.

“We’ve got great kids. We’ve got a lot of character kids. And anytime you’ve got high-character kids, they always put a lot of confidence in you that they’re going to come through for you,” Dorrel said. “We talk about stuff like that in our program year-round, about the next man up and you never know when your opportunity is going to arise to be a starter.”

Beyond that, he pointed out, “our philosophy is we tend to play a lot more people early in the season than other programs do for a situation like that. We weren’t putting Billy in there with no playing time, meaningful playing time. We weren’t putting Kohlman in there (like that). Those guys had played at Arrowhead (vs. Pittsburg State). They’d played against Washburn. They played against Western. They’d played in big games.”

They now have at least one more.

The Bearcats, seeded fourth of the six Region 3 teams that reached the playoffs, are going after their ninth quarterfinal berth in nine years. That would make a little history, tying the longest such streak ever in Division II (Grand Valley State from 2001-09). And it would be the second longest streak in any NCAA division, from I-AA through Division III.

Mount Union has piled up 20 straight quarterfinal appearances dating to 1992, and has reached at least the semifinals in each of the past 17 years. The Purple Raiders, who routed Christopher Newport University 72-14 Saturday, take an 11-0 record D-III’s second round vs. Johns Hopkins next weekend.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

MWSU men use big second half to rally past Rockhurst

Missouri Western fell behind early but James Harris led the charge off the bench late to give the Griffons a 60-45 victory Saturday night at MWSU Fieldhouse.

The Hawks jumped out to a 20-12 lead with a 3-pointer by B.J. Dunbar. Later on in the half, Harris hit two free throws to tie the game at 23. Rockhurst eventually took a 31-26 lead into the half.

In the second half, the Hawks went up 41-32 at the 16:18 mark as David Wingerson nailed a 3-pointer, but after that, Rockhurst scored just three points in the second half.

The Hawks went 10 minutes and 53 seconds without a field goal, which included 7:16 without any points. They scored only 14 points in the second half as the Griffons went on a 28-4 run to end the game, winning 60-45.

Harris finished the game with 18 points to help the Griffons pull away. Besides Harris, Cedric Clinkscales had another huge night, going 4-for-4 with 12 points.

Up Next: The Griffons play Park University at 2:00 p.m. Friday, November 23 at the Rockhurst University Harvester’s Classic.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Northwest men pull away late and defeat William Jewell

A solid second half from Alex Sullivan helped the Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team take a 75-56 win over William Jewell Saturday night at the 21st Annual Hillyard Tipoff Classic.

Northwest improved to 3-0 on the season and won both games at the Hillyard Classic for the second straight season. William Jewell fell to 1-2 on the season after knocking off Missouri Western 76-60 Friday night behind 10 three-pointers.

Saturday night however, was all Northwest.

Sullivan scored 14 second half points and finished 4-of-9 from behind the three-point arc to pace Northwest in the win. The senior guard finished with a game-high 22 points.

After taking a 27-23 lead at half time Northwest would never trail in the second half. The Bearcats outrebounded William Jewell 46-32 and also got 20 second chance points compared to only 12 for the Cardinals.

DeAngelo Hailey added 20 points for Northwest and pulled in six rebounds. Hailey and Sullivan combined for 42 points in the non-conference win while Kyle Schlake grabbed a game-high 12 rebounds.

The Bearcats continued a hot streak from behind the three-point line shooting 44 percent on 8-of-18 shooting.

Northwest returns to action after the Thanksgiving break as they host the Bearcat Classic Nov. 24 and 25. The Bearcats open with Upper Iowa on Saturday before closing out the tournament against Southwest Minnesota. Action for the Bearcats starts each day at 3 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Mizzou blows fourth quarter lead and falls to Syracuse

Ryan Nassib threw a 17-yard touchdown pass to a wide-open Alec Lemon with 20 seconds to go, capping a 21-point fourth quarter as Syracuse spoiled Missouri’s home finale with a 31-27 victory on Saturday night.

Lemon had 12 receptions for 244 yards and two scores, including a 13-yard catch that tied it at 17 earlier in the fourth. After trailing 17-3 early, the Orangemen (6-5) followed up on a 45-26 upset of previously unbeaten Louisville a week earlier and became bowl eligible for the second time in three seasons.

Andrew Baggett’s 46-yard field goal with 1:52 to play had put Missouri, minus injured quarterback James Franklin, up by three.

Kendial Lawrence had 119 yards on 27 carries with a fourth-quarter touchdown for the Tigers (5-6), who need a victory at No. 9 Texas A&M next week to become bowl eligible for the eighth straight season. Backup quarterback Corbin Berkstresser led Missouri to 10 points in the fourth quarter after replacing Franklin, described as ”woozy” by the team’s radio broadcast after getting hit the previous drive.

Nassib was 26 for 40 for 385 yards and two touchdowns, setting a school career record for yards passing. He had entered the game only 6 yards shy of the mark of 8,466 yards set by Marvin Graves from 1990-93.

All three of Syracuse’s scoring drives in the fourth quarter, including an 8-yard run by Jerome Smith that tied it at 24 with 5:33 to go in the fourth quarter, lasted less than two minutes.

The Orangemen ended Missouri’s 18-game winning streak against non-conference opponents, the school’s best in the modern era.

Syracuse piled up 508 yards against a Missouri defense that faded without star tackle Sheldon Richardson, who did not dress after multiple reports during the week that he had been suspended for academic reasons. Richardson entered the game tied for the team lead in tackles.

Franklin threw touchdown passes on the first two drives and was 17 for 23 for a season-best 279 yards. He watched from far down the sideline as Berkstresser went 2 for 2 for 65 yards that produced Lawrence’s TD run for the lead.

Baggett’s 46-yard field goal tied his career best, capitalizing on an interception by Randy Ponder off a deflected pass.

Dorial Green-Beckham broke free for a 70-yard score on a screen pass on the fourth snap of the game and Jimmie Hunt scored on a 30-yard reception in the first quarter.

Syracuse cut the deficit to 17-10 near the end of the half on a 1-yard run by Prince-Tyson Gulley.

Green-Beckham was untouched on a screen pass on the fourth snap, a 70-yard jaunt. After Syracuse settled for a field goal when Lemon whiffed on a pass that went between his legs at the 5, Franklin hit Jimmie Hunt on a 30-yard touchdown on third-and-14 to make it 14-3.

Green-Beckham scored on his third consecutive reception and Hunt scored his fourth career touchdown on just nine receptions. Green-Beckham and Danario Alexander (2009) are the only players in school history with a pair of 70-yard TD catches in a season.

— Associated Press —

Western women stay unbeaten with 74-68 win at Maryville

Missouri Western’s women’s basketball team advanced to 4-0 on the young season with a 74-68 victory over Maryville University.

The Griffons led 8-2 early but Maryville came back to tie the game at 10.

After Missouri Western stretched its lead out to 34-27, Maryville’s Shelby Miller knocked down a 3 at the end of the half to make it 34-30.

The Griffons fell behind 53-49, they came back to notch things up at 53 with back-to-back layups by Heather Howard. The Griffons continued to apply pressure to the Saints, and Howard knocked down a 3-pointer to give the Griffons a slim, 59-57 lead.

Maryville took the lead back off of a jumper from Brittnye McSparron to make it 63-61, but MWSU came right back as Brittany Griswold nailed two clutch free throws to tie the game at 63.

The game settled at 64, but Lanicia Lawrence scored seven straight points to put Missouri Western up 71-64. Maryville threatened late but ran out of time as Alicia Bell hit two free throws to make it 74-68.

Jallisa Lewis added 11 points and four rebounds for the Griffons. Howard finished the night with a double-double, scoring 17 points and tallying 10 rebounds.

Up Next: The Griffons play Truman State in a nonconference game at 5:00 p.m. in Jefferson City, Mo. on Friday, November 23.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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