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Wildcats move up to No. 2 in BCS Standings

Kansas State earned its highest-ever BCS ranking Sunday night as the Wildcats checked in at No. 2 in the latest standings announced on ESPN.

K-State, which was fourth in the initial poll this season, tied its previous best ranking last week by checking in at No. 3 before moving up one spot on Sunday. The Wildcats were also ranked third in the BCS standings five-straight weeks to end the 1998 season. Earlier Sunday, Kansas State was slotted No. 3 in the both the USA Today Sports Coaches’ Poll and Associated Press Top 25.

Kansas State is one of five unbeaten teams and one of six Big 12 members in the newest BCS Top 25 as the Wildcats were joined by Oklahoma (12th), Texas Tech (18th), West Virginia (21st), Texas (23rd) and Oklahoma State (24th). The Big 12 has had at least 50 percent of its teams ranked each week in the BCS standings.

The Wildcats will face their fourth-straight ranked opponent on Saturday as K-State takes on the 24th-ranked Cowboys in a nationally-televised game on ABC. The sold-out contest at Bill Snyder Family Stadium is set for a 7 p.m.

— KSU Sports Information —

Kansas State/Oklahoma State game to kickoff at 7:00 PM

Undefeated Kansas State will be featured in prime time Saturday against Oklahoma State in a 7 p.m., kickoff on ABC, the Big 12 Conference has announced.

The contest against the Cowboys, which will be shown to a national audience, marks the Wildcats’ first appearance on ABC this season and the first since a 53-50 victory in four overtimes last year against Texas A&M.

Saturday’s sold-out game will feature two of the top teams in the Big 12. The Wildcats, sitting at 8-0 overall and 5-0 in the Big 12, sit atop the conference standings following its 55-24 victory over No. 14 Texas Tech. Oklahoma State (5-2) enters the game tied for second in the conference with a 3-1 Big 12 record after a 36-14 win over TCU on Saturday.

Television Selections for November 3

Oklahoma at Iowa State, 11 a.m., ABC

TCU at West Virginia, 2 p.m., FOX

Texas at Texas Tech, 2:30 p.m., ABC/ESPN2

Kansas at Baylor, 2:30 p.m., FSN

Oklahoma State at K-State, 7 p.m., ABC

— KSU Sports Information —

No. 3 Kansas State routs 14th-ranked Texas Tech

Bill Snyder moved at a brisk pace when he walked into his postgame press conference a few minutes after third-ranked Kansas State polished off a 55-24 victory against No. 14Texas Tech.

Must not have had much to tell the team after that one, eh Coach?

”I’m working on my conditioning,” Snyder said flatly.

There’s always something to work on in Snyder’s world, though it might take a couple extra looks at Saturday’s game tape to find much to complain about, besides a slow start. The Wildcats led by a field goal at halftime before roaring through a big third quarter to their first 8-0 start since 1999.

Collin Klein threw for 233 yards and two touchdowns, and had 83 yards and two more scores on the ground, bolstering his Heisman Trophy credentials. Arthur Brown returned an interception for a touchdown, John Hubert added two TDs rushing and Angelo Pease also scored for the Wildcats.

”We were playing well defensively. Offensively we hadn’t figured it out yet,” Snyder said of the shaky first half. ”Sometimes you have to spar a little bit to get going.”

Evidently, the Wildcats (5-0 Big 12) found the sweet spot in the nation’s No. 7 defense.

They wound up going on a 52-7 run that spanned about 35 minutes, eclipsing the 50-point mark for the fifth time this season and putting up the kind of result that should help them in the polls – they trailed Alabama and Florida in the BCS standings coming into the game, and the Gators lost to No. 12 Georgia.

”It’s tough not to (look ahead) knowing you’re so close,” said Chris Harper, who had five catches for 99 yards. ”But we just have to focus on next week.”

Seth Doege threw for 331 yards and two touchdowns for the Red Raiders (6-2, 3-2), but also had the costliest of interceptions. Doege had thrown for 13 TDs in wins over West Virginia and TCU the last two weeks to jump into the Heisman conversation.

Of course, Klein is a major part of that discussion.

The senior quarterback, now 19-4 as a starter, joined kicker Martin Gramatica as the only players in school history with at least 300 points. And his vastly improved passing game, a subject of such ridicule last season, is a big reason the Wildcats have been so prolific on offense.

”We got some pretty short fields, which helps a lot,” Klein said. ”It was just a great team effort, hanging in there when things weren’t going well early in the game.”

The Red Raiders’ second-half meltdown was similar to last year’s matchup in Lubbock, when they blew a 28-20 lead against Kansas State by turning it over three times in the fourth quarter.

”We moved the ball, made a lot of yardage, but you can’t turn it over,” Texas Tech coach Tommy Tuberville said. ”I think we gave up 17, 20 points on offense and our kicking game today.”

Things started off well enough for the Red Raiders.

Doege took advantage of soft coverage on the opening series of the game, completing six of his first eight passes. An encroachment penalty on third down kept the drive alive, and Doege finished it off with a 32-yard touchdown toss to Eric Ward.

The Wildcats, meanwhile, couldn’t get anything going.

Klein was sacked to end their first series, and had a pass tipped on third down to end their second. By the end of the quarter, Kansas State had just 19 yards of offense.

”We knew what they were going to do,” Texas Tech linebacker Terrance Bullitt said.

It was Kansas State’s defense that finally provided a spark when Meshak Williams delivered a crushing blindside hit on Doege, popping the ball loose. Jarell Childs went the other way for what appeared to be a 74-yard TD return, but an illegal block brought it back to the Texas Tech 14.

Kansas State had to settle for Anthony Cantele’s 34-yard field goal.

Ryan Bustin matched it with a 37-yarder to cap the Red Raiders’ next possession, but Kansas State finally started humming. Hubert capped off its ensuing drive by winning a race to the pylon after getting stood up at the line of scrimmage to make it 10-all.

Bustin had a 50-yard field goal blocked on Texas Tech’s next series, and Kansas State’s quick-strike offense set up a 19-yarder by Cantele for the halftime lead.

It was a sign that everything was starting to go right for the Wildcats.

Four straight plays of 10-plus yards to start the second half led to a 21-yard TD toss from Klein to Tramaine Thompson. And after Ward fumbled on the Red Raiders’ first offensive play of the third quarter, Klein needed only two plays to scamper in from 16 yards out for a 27-10 lead.

”When it came down to making plays to finish,” Doege said, ”we just didn’t make them.”

Sadale Foster’s touchdown run gave the Red Raiders a flicker of hope, but Klein added a 22-yard TD run, Hubert had a 15-yarder early in the fourth quarter, and Brown’s pick-six snuffed it out completely. Pease added the Wildcats’ final score midway through the third quarter.

”You look around the country and they’re making more of college football than they do the presidential election,” Snyder said afterward. ”It’s so easy to lose sight of things. I’m so proud of our guys because of the way they’ve handled things up to this point in time.”

— Associated Press —

Kansas State’s Athur Brown named Butkus Award semifinalist

Kansas State senior linebacker Arthur Brown has been named one of 12 semifinalists nationally for the 28th Annual Butkus Award honoring the nation’s top linebacker, the Butkus Foundation announced Monday.

Brown is the fifth Wildcat to become a semifinalist for the award and the first since Josh Buhl in 2003. Mark Simoneau, a 2012 College Football Hall of Fame inductee, was the runner-up for the award in 1999, while Jeff Kelly (1998) and Percell Gaskins (1995) were also semifinalists.

A native of Wichita, Kan., Brown is in his second year with the Wildcats after transferring from Miami following his sophomore season. Brown leads the Wildcats and ranks eighth in the Big 12 with 55 tackles, including six for loss and one sack. The senior also became the first player this season to intercept West Virginia’s Geno Smith last week after the Mountaineer quarterback broke an NCAA record of 273 consecutive attempts without a pick earlier in the contest. Brown, who had eight tackles against WVU, was named the Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week.

Brown, who also broke eventual Heisman Trophy winner Robert Griffin III’s streak of 110 attempts without an interception last season, has earned Midseason All-America honors from CBSSports.com and Phil Steele, while he was a Midseason All-Big 12 honoree by ESPN.com.

Third-ranked Kansas State hosts No. 14 ranked Texas Tech this Saturday in a sold-out contest at Bill Snyder Family Stadium. The game kicks off at 2:30 p.m., in FOX’s College Football Game of the Week.
2012 Butkus Award Semifinalists

Steve Beauharnais      Rutgers
Arthur Brown             Kansas State
Jonathan Brown          Illinois
Max Bullough              Michigan State
Gerald Hodges            Penn State
Jarvis Jones                 Georgia
Dion Jordan                 Oregon
Michael Mauti            Penn State
Kevin Minter               LSU
C.J. Mosley                  Alabama
Trent Murphy              Stanford
Manti Te’o                  Notre Dame

— KSU Sports Information —

K-State’s Klein, Brown earn weekly Big 12 awards

Following an impressive 55-14 victory at No. 13 West Virginia on Saturday, Kansas State quarterback Collin Klein and linebacker Arthur Brown were named the Big 12 Offensive and Defensive Players of the Week, the conference office announced Monday.

The honor was the second of the season for Klein (Miami) and the third of his career, while it was the first time Brown has been honored in 2012 and the second time in as many seasons. The Wildcats now have a Big 12-leading 14 player-of-the-week honors since the beginning of 2011, double the amount of the team in second place.

Klein, who was also named the Walter Camp National Offensive Player of the Week, accounted for seven touchdowns – including a career-best three through the air – and completed 19-of-21 passes for a career-high 323 yards (266.82 rating) against the Mountaineers. With his four rushing touchdowns against WVU, Klein set the NCAA FBS record for rushing touchdowns by a quarterback in two consecutive seasons with 41, while his career total of 47 surpassed Darren Sproles’ previous school record of 45. The senior has thrown for 1,397 yards and 10 touchdowns this season while rushing for 551 yards and 14 scores.

Brown led a K-State defense that held the prolific West Virginia offense to just 243 total yards, including 155 through the air. The Wichita, Kan., product carded eight tackles, including a pair for losses. He also registered his second career interception, which ended Geno Smith’s streak of consecutive passes without an interception at a NCAA record 273. The senior linebacker’s first career pick came against Baylor’s Robert Griffin III last season and ended the eventual Heisman Trophy winner’s consecutive passes streak without an interception (110).

Kansas State, ranked third in this week’s BCS standings, will take on 14th-ranked Texas Tech on Saturday at Bill Snyder Family Stadium. The game, which kicks off at 2:30 p.m., serves as FOX’s College Football Game of the Week.

— KSU Sports Information —

KSU’s Klein named Walter Camp National Player of the Week

Kansas State senior quarterback Collin Klein has been named the Walter Camp National Offensive Player of the Week following his performance in the Wildcats’ 55-14 win at West Virginia.

Klein accounted for seven touchdowns (4 rushing, 3 passing) and completed 19-of-21 passes for a career-high 323 yards to lead the Wildcats to their school-record fourth straight road win over a ranked opponent.

With his four rushing touchdowns on Saturday, Klein also broke the NCAA FBS record for rushing touchdowns by a quarterback in two consecutive seasons with 41, while his 47 career rushing touchdowns are a new K-State record, surpassing Darren Sproles’ 45. On the year, Klein has thrown for 1,397 yards and 10 touchdowns while also rushing for 551 yards and 14 scores.

No. 4 K-State hosts No. 17 Texas Tech Saturday for a key Big 12 Conference matchup. Kickoff from Bill Snyder Family Stadium is scheduled for 2:30 p.m., and the game will be televised nationally on FOX.

— KSU Sports Information —

Klein leads No. 4 K-State to 55-14 rout of West Virginia

The final touchdown pass drew only a slight fist pump from Collin Klein. It was still the third quarter, but Milan-Puskar Stadium was half-empty. Most of the West Virginia fans had seen enough of a game that had turned into a Heisman Trophy campaign ad for the Kansas State quarterback.

Klein threw for a career-high 323 yards and three touchdowns and ran for four scores as No. 4 Kansas State got little resistance from No. 17 West Virginia in a 55-14 victory Saturday night.

The Wildcats (7-0, 4-0 Big 12) made it look easy. Klein completed 19 of 21 passes and added 41 yards rushing.

”I think we all felt comfortable tonight,” he said. ”The coaches did a great job of building a game plan and putting us in positions to succeed.”

No doubt. The Wildcats scored on their first eight possessions, including seven straight touchdowns.

”He doesn’t do anything wrong,” West Virginia coach Dana Holgorsen said of Klein. ”He’s hard to tackle. He gets them in good plays. He doesn’t turn the ball over. You can say what you want to about the throwing motion, but it goes exactly where he wants it go. He’s a good football player.”

Way too good for West Virginia to stop.

It was no surprise the Mountaineers (5-2, 2-2) were awful on defense – it’s been that way all season. For the second straight game, though, Geno Smith and the offense did nothing to keep it close.

Smith followed up a clunker at Texas Tech last week with an even worse game, throwing his first two interceptions of the season and finishing 21 of 32 for 143 yards. The senior has gone from Heisman Trophy front-runner to long shot in two weeks.

”We talked about it all week. Don’t get impatient. Don’t get impatient,” Holgorsen said. ”You have the ball a couple of times and you look up there and you’re down 17 points and you start pressing. It’s inevitable.

”We’re trying to score 14 points in one play.”

Kansas State made it 52-7 with 2:25 left in the third quarter when Klein hit Tyler Lockett over the middle for a 20-yard score. Klein turned toward his sideline and gave a modest shake of his fist before joining his teammates to celebrate. It was the fourth time this season the Wildcats had scored in the 50s.

By that point a long line of cars was creeping out of the parking lot. The only section of the stadium that was still filled was covered in KSU purple.

”I was certainly pleased with the way that our youngsters approached the ballgame, the preparation for the game and how they traveled,” said Bill Snyder, whose remarkable 21-year, two-act career as Kansas State coach is only missing a national championship. ”I was proud of how they kept their focus. We played great.”

The optimism and excitement that was pumping through Morgantown a couple of weeks ago is gone.

In Manhattan, Kan., it’s all good, and everything is on the table for Snyder’s team. The Wildcats are the only unbeaten squad in the Big 12. Their quarterback is the Heisman front-runner. And with five games left on the schedule, the Wildcats are serious national title contenders.

The first meeting since 1931 of the new Big 12 rivals was so lopsided that by the time it was over it was hard to even remember that it started as a battle for first place in the conference.

On one side was Klein, aka Optimus Klein, the Wildcats’ methodical battering ram, whose passes don’t look like much, but usually find their target.

On the other side was Smith, the future NFL first-round draft pick with the video game passing statistics.

But Klein got to face West Virginia’s beleaguered defense, which ranks near the bottom of the Big 12 and the country in just about every statistic.

With the Mountaineers seemingly determined to at least stop the run early, Klein completed his first seven passes, including a 10-yard touchdown that Lockett made a stretching, toe-dragging catch on in the back corner of the end zone. That made it 10-0 in the first.

The K-State running game went to work on the third drive and Klein finished it off with a 1-yard plunge.

Klein made it 24-0 on the next Kansas State drive, taking an option keeper 8 yards. That gave him 39 rushing touchdowns over the last two seasons to break an FBS record held by Eric Crouch of Nebraska and Stacey Robinson of Northern Illinois.

Tavon Austin finally put a little life back into the sellout crowd when he took the ensuing kickoff back 100 yards for a score with 4:12 left in the first half.

The bad news for West Virginia was that it gave the Wildcats more than enough time to get the ball back in the end zone – which they did with another 1-yard dive by Klein.

The first-half onslaught went like this for Kansas State: five possessions, 346 yards, four touchdowns and a field goal. The offense was unstoppable and the defense was just as good, holding Smith to 62 yards by flooding the secondary with defenders and getting a pass rush without blitzing much.

”I thought our defense played well and played aggressive and pursued the ball,” Snyder said. ”We had a relentless pass rush and we got our hands on Geno Smith.”

Maybe the pressure of having to score every time he touches the ball has gotten to Smith, too. That trip to New York for the Heisman Trophy presentation, which seemed like a lock after the Mountaineers won at Texas, is now in serious doubt.

”This is about as low as it gets,” Smith said.

As for Klein and the Wildcats, they will face tougher tests. The gap between the top and the bottom of the Big 12 doesn’t seem all that wide. But they have now won three conference road games, including at Oklahoma. They came into the weekend fourth in the BCS standings, behind Alabama, Florida and Oregon.

With their 73-year-old coach pushing all the right buttons and their happily married quarterback making all the right plays, the Wildcats might be due for a promotion.

— Associated Press —

KSU QB Klein named finalist for Senior CLASS Award

Kansas State senior quarterback Collin Klein has been named one of 10 finalists among FBS programs for the 2012 Senior CLASS Award, the organization announced Thursday.

Klein is the first Wildcat to be named a finalist for the award, which highlights NCAA Division I FBS seniors that have notable achievements in four areas of excellence – community, classroom, character and competition. An acronym for Celebrating Loyalty and Achievement for Staying in School, the Senior CLASS Award focuses on the total student-athlete and encourages students to use their platform in athletics to make a positive impact as leaders in their communities.

Klein, who was also named to the AFCA Good Works Team in September, has been active in volunteerism in the Manhattan community since his true freshman season of 2008. A member of the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, Klein has regularly visited local retirement centers, been active in Read to Achieve in which he has helped out at elementary schools, taken part in Adopt-a-Family during the holiday season and been a regular volunteer for the Special Olympics Sports Clinic at K-State.

In addition, Klein has been active in local church group activities as he has served as a prayer group leader for Grace Baptist Church and been the keynote speaker at multiple Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA) and Christian Meetings.

On the field, the Loveland, Colo., product has guided the Wildcats to a 6-0 start and a No. 4 ranking in the initial BCS standings. Klein has thrown for 1,074 yards and seven touchdowns on 79-of-118 aim, while he has rushed for 10 scores and 510 yards on 98 carries. The signal caller, who has 43 career rushing touchdowns, is two away of tying Darren Sproles’ K-State career record and one away from tying the FBS record for rushing touchdowns by a quarterback in consecutive seasons (38). Additionally, Klein is one of just two BCS quarterbacks with at least 10 rushing and seven passing touchdowns this season.

Other finalists for the award include Ryan Aplin (Arkansas State), Johnthan Banks (Mississippi State), Matt Barkley (USC), Duron Harmon (Rutgers), Barrett Jones (Alabama), Landry Jones (Oklahoma), Sean Renfree (Duke), Adam Replogle (Indiana) and Manti Te’o (Notre Dame).

Finalists for the award were chosen by a media committee from the list of 30 candidates announced in September. Nationwide fan voting begins immediately to help select a winner. Fans are encouraged to vote on the Senior CLASS Award website – www.seniorclassaward.com – through December 3. Fan votes will be combined with media and Division I head coaches’ vote to determine the winner, which will be announced during the 2012-13 bowl season.

Third-ranked Kansas State will travel to Morgantown, W.Va., this Saturday to take on No. 15 West Virginia in FOX’s College Football Game of the Week. Kickoff from Milan Puskar Stadium is set for 6:05 p.m.

— KSU Sports Information —

Kansas State fourth in initial BCS Standings

Following its hard-fought 27-21 victory Saturday at No. 25 Iowa State to move to 6-0, Kansas State was ranked fourth in the initial BCS Standings released Sunday night on ESPN.

The No. 4 ranking was the highest for the Wildcats (6-0, 3-0 Big 12) in an opening BCS poll, while it was the highest overall since sitting in third place for five-straight weeks to end the 1998 season. Earlier Sunday, Kansas State was slotted No. 3 in the USA Today Sports Coaches’ Poll and No. 4 in the Associated Press Top 25.
Kansas State, one of 10 unbeaten teams in the BCS Top 25, was joined by Big 12 members Oklahoma (ninth), West Virginia (13th), Texas Tech (17th), TCU (23rd), Iowa State (24th) and Texas (25th) in the first poll of 2012.

The Wildcats will travel to Morgantown, W.Va., on Saturday to take on the Mountaineers in FOX’s College Football Game of the Week. Kickoff from Milan Puskar Stadium is set for 6:05 p.m.

— KSU Sports Information —

K-State holds off Iowa State to win 27-21

Kansas State’s offense is at its best when quarterback Collin Klein has the ball in his hands as much as possible.

The Wildcats defense doesn’t mind it either.

Klein ran for 105 yards and three touchdowns and sixth-ranked Kansas State held off Iowa State 27-21 for its fifth straight win over the Cyclones.

Klein also threw for 187 yards for the Wildcats (6-0, 3-0 Big 12), who held the ball for over 40 minutes, converted on eight of 17 third downs and remained unbeaten heading into next week’s showdown with West Virginia.

Kansas State held the Cyclones (4-2, 1-2) to just 231 yards of offense, in large part because Klein hardly ever let them touch the ball.

”It’s an honor. It’s a team game, though. It’s about all 11 of us out there, it’s about all 11 of us out there to execute, be calm in a high pressure situation,” Klein said. ”We were able to get some big, big first downs.”

Iowa State still had a chance for the game-winning drive from its own 3-yard line with 2:17 left. But the Wildcats defense – no doubt as fresh as it could be in such a late spot – stopped the Cyclones on downs.

Jared Barnett threw for 166 yards and two TDs for Iowa State, which appears to be much better than many thought this season.

But like every team before them, the Cyclones had no answer for the methodical Klein.

”It was like he always does. He ran the ball well, the managed the ballgame well, threw the ball reasonably. His leadership was good,” Kansas State coach Bill Snyder said.

Saturday’s win was a vintage performance by Klein, who outgained the Cyclones by himself and showed why he’s among the nation’s best quarterbacks on the run.

One play in particular told the story of the day. Facing third-and-long deep in Iowa State territory, Klein hung in a collapsing pocket long enough for the right side of the field to open up. He bounced out of trouble and, with defenders going the other way, darted 12 yards to put Kansas State up 24-14 with 49 seconds left in the third quarter.

”Patience. He followed his blocks, and sometimes even when there wasn’t a hole he just waited it out. You know, he’s not a hard runner. He’s a tough runner,” Iowa State linebacker Jeremiah George said. ”He’s not going to bruise you around. He’s just going to wait, wait, wait.”

But to its credit, Iowa State simply wouldn’t go away.

The Cyclones, helped immensely by a pass interference call on the Wildcats at the goal line, answered with a 2-yard TD run by Jeff Woody to get within 24-21 with 12:34 to go.

The problem was Iowa State’s defense had already been on the field for 30 minutes by then, and the Wildcats wisely chose to wear the Cyclones out on the ground.

Though Kansas State had to settle for a 25-yard field goal from Anthony Cantele, they burned over eight minutes driving down the field.

Iowa State had two more chances. It was stuffed on fourth down both times.

”I think we played well defensively,” Snyder said. ”We had our moments, but we certainly had things we’d like to have back.”

What had been torrential downpours eased by the late morning kickoff. Still, the game was played on a soggy field with heavy, swirling wind and two of the Big 12’s best defenses squaring off.

None of that seemed to matter early on, since the Cyclones and Wildcats each found ways to put up points.

Iowa State jumped ahead 7-3 on Shontrelle Johnson’s 2-yard TD grab to open the second quarter.

Klein answered, bullying his way through a pile of defenders for a critical fourth-down conversion at the Iowa State 3-yard line. Klein punched it in from 2 yards out to make it 10-7, Kansas State, with 8:18 left in the first half.

Barnett shook off a bad interception at the Kansas State goal line with a 30-yard TD pass to a wide-open Ernst Brun in the flat. But Klein’s skills as a runner helped buy him enough room to toss a 45-yard completion to Tyler Lockett, and his 6-yard TD run put the Wildcats ahead 17-14 at halftime.

”He’s getting the ball, so something good is going to happen. That’s just our thought,” Kansas State wide receiver Chris Harper said of Klein.

Iowa State played without its leading rusher, James White, who missed the game with a knee injury that Rhoads said after the game will likely keep him out for two weeks.

The Cyclones struggled without White, rushing for just 65 yards on 24 carries. But given how much clock Klein and the Wildcats ate up, it’s not like White would gotten a lot of carries anyway.

”It reads like a Bill Snyder-authored novel. Standard Kansas State football game, coached by a legendary coach and quarterbacked by a great, great football player,” Rhoads said.

— Associated Press —

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