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Bearcat women lose exhibition game at Iowa State, 80-33

A tough brand of in your face defense opened the Mark Kellogg era for the Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team. However, a hot second half from NCAA Division I Iowa State pushed the Cyclones past the Bearcats 80-33 in exhibition action from Hilton Coliseum.

Northwest jumped out to a hounding full-court press, catching the Cyclones off guard to start the game. The Bearcats would keep the game within 10 points most of the first half until Iowa State’s 7-0 run to end the first half and push the lead to 30-11 at intermission.

Led by 6’7” WNBA prospect, Anna Prins, the Cyclones exploded in the second half to shoot over 60 percent from the field as Northwest struggled offensively shooting just 20 percent for the game. Prins finished with 11 points as Chelsea Poppens lead all players with 22.

The Bearcats were led by Victoria Naylor who finished with seven points and made one of the Bearcats four three-pointers. Northwest was just 4-of-26 from behind the three-point arc in the loss.

In all, every Bearcat saw minutes in the season’s first exhibition action with nine different players scoring for Northwest.

Northwest also shot well from the free-throw line finishing 7-of-10. Both Ashleigh Nelson and Denise McEnaney were perfect from the line as Nelson finished 2-for-2 and McEnaney went 4-for-4.

Northwest continues exhibition action as they host Peru State to close out Homecoming weekend Saturday evening. Admission for all fans is free as the Mark Kellogg era debuts at Bearcat Arena. Game time is set for 6:30 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest volleyball falls in four sets to No. 6 Central Missouri

Fighting an uphill battle the Northwest Missouri State volleyball team gave 6th-ranked Central Missouri all they could handle Wednesday night before falling 3-1 in MIAA action.

Northwest saw its three-game winning streak end as they fell to 14-14 on the season and 8-7 in the MIAA. The Jennies improved to 21-4 overall and 13-1 in league play and still sit tied at the top of the conference.

From the opening serve the Bearcats gave UCM all they could manage before falling 25-22, 17-25, 28-26, 25-18. It was a back-and-forth battle in the first three sets that saw the Bearcats steal the second set before dropping an exciting third set that witnessed 14 ties and five different lead changes.

Sophomores Brooke Bartosh and Abby Graves each finished with 12 kills to pace Northwest as the Bearcats held UCM to a .168 hitting percentage.

However, the Jennies got seven blocks as a team and had three players finish with double figure kills to take the win.

Senior Tori Beckman continued her amazing season as she finished with 36 digs in the loss. In her last five games Beckman has tallied 153 digs as she continues to lead the conference and put up amazing numbers on the defensive side of the net.

Julia Bates recorded a double-double for the Jennies with 37 assists and 10 digs to pace UCM.

The Bearcats take the weekend off before facing their second top 10 next Tuesday when they travel to 4th-ranked Nebraska-Kearney. First serve from Kearney is set for 4 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest Missouri State men lose exhibition game at Mizzou, 91-58

Alex Sullivan scored a career high 19 points as Northwest Missouri State fell 91-58 to the 15th-ranked Missouri Tigers Monday night in men’s basketball exhibition action from Mizzou Arena.

Sullivan knocked down the first points of the game for the Bearcats at the 16:46 mark and it would almost six minutes before the Bearcats would score again. The senior from Painesville, Ohio finished 5-of-8 from behind the three-point line and was 6-of-10 from the field coming off the bench.

The Tigers played a smothering defense, but highlighted the first four minutes with three three-pointers from transfer guard Earnets Ross. Ross finished with 22 to lead all players after knocking down six three-pointers in the exhibition contest.

SEC Preseason Player of the Year, Phil Pressey handed out 11 assists while Keion Bell added 20 points.

After trailing 53-12 at the half the Bearcats recovered in the second half getting solid post play. The Tigers only outscored the Bearcats 38-37 in the second period.

Dillon Starzl – one of only two returning starters for the Bearcats – finished with seven points as Grant Cozad added five points and seven rebounds.

Northwest opens its regular season Nov. 11 at Bearcat Arena when they host Graceland.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest/Emporia State game to air on MIAA TV Network

This week’s homecoming contest between No. 5 Northwest Missouri State and No. 16 Emporia State Saturday, Nov. 3, has been selected as the MIAA TV Game of the Week and will kick off at 2:30 p.m. The selection fills the first week of flex broadcasting as announced by the MIAA.

Kickoff for the Bearcats’ homecoming game was originally slated for 2 p.m., but is pushed back to fit the network TV window at 2:30 p.m. This will be the second time this season the Bearcats will be featured as the MIAA TV Game of the Week with the first being during a week five win over Northeastern State.

The Bearcats and Hornets enter Saturday’s game tied atop the MIAA standings, both with only one loss. Northwest is coming off an impressive 56-6 road win over Washburn while ESU fell at home Thursday night to Missouri Western, 57-28.

The final flex game in the MIAA TV has yet to be set by the league office.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Bearcats roll past Washburn for seventh straight win

He grew up watching Northwest Missouri State football, dressed and played for the Bearcats and now has spent 15 years on their sideline as a coach.

Never, Adam Dorrel said, had he seen their defense secondary put in a day like Saturday.

Six different players came up with six interceptions at Washburn, the first a little more than two minutes into the game. Every one led to a touchdown. It turned what could have been a critical test on the road – with the regular season winding down and a playoff berth hanging in the balance – into a relaxed, 56-6 rout of the Ichabods.

The victory extended Northwest’s winning streak to seven, put an exclamation point on a four-week, four-game stretch away from home and fortified the Bearcats’ top-five ranking in the NCAA’s Super Region 3. Looming are showdowns with Emporia State and Missouri Western – both in Bearcat Stadium the next two weeks.

“They’ve got a lot to play for,” Dorrel said, “just like we do.”

Northwest Missouri (8-1) is one of three once-beaten teams atop the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletic Association. The others: Emporia and Missouri Western.

Western raised eyebrows with a 57-28 beat down of Emporia State on Thursday, rushing for 382 yards. The Bearcats made their own statement two days later, striking hard and often on both sides of the line.

Washburn had won seven of its first eight games in part by taking care of the ball, committing the fewest turnovers – four fumbles and five interceptions – in the MIAA. Northwest’s Clarke Snodgrass was the first to pad those numbers, sniffing out a screen pass by the Ichabods’ Mitch Buhler, stepping in front of the intended receiver and giving the Bearcats the ball at their own 45-yard line just 2:02 into the game.

It took six plays for the offense to capitalize, quarterback Trevor Adams hitting Tyler Shaw with a 31-yard TD pass.

The template was set. The next interception, by the Bearcats’ Travis Manning in the end zone, choked off a threat after Washburn recovered a fumble at the Northwest 6. The following three – by Nate DeJong and Brian Dixon in the second quarter and Collin DeBuysere in the third – set the offense up at the Ichabods’ 22-, 23- and 14-yard lines, respectively.

The payoff each time was a Bearcats TD. They led 14-0 by the opening minutes of the second quarter, 35-0 by halftime and 49-0 before Washburn finally managed to score with 4:09 left in the third quarter.

Sophomore Chet Meneely returned the last of the half-dozen interceptions 14 yards for a touchdown with 1:26 left.

“We got a couple of turnovers,” Dorrel said, “and then it just kept going and going and going. I thought our secondary played a very complete game.

“We’ve got two really good safeties (Snodgrass and Nate DeJong, both fifth-year seniors), and it really starts with them. They’re the information center of our defense. And right now, our coaching staff is putting a lot on their shoulders to get us checked into the proper coverages and things of that nature.”

Said Snodgrass, “Our coaches had a great game plan for us today, a lot of tip(off)s out of their offense that we saw.”

Indeed, the Bearcats seemed prepared for everything that Washburn’s two sophomore quarterbacks – Buhler and Joel Piper – threw at them. Each was picked off three times.

Manning’s interception of Buhler late in the first quarter was pivotal. The score was still 7-0. The Northwest defense had forced a punt but, on the first play from scrimmage, Adams couldn’t connect on an attempted handoff and Washburn’s Alex Dowty recovered the fumble at the Bearcats’ 6-yard line.

The Ichabods went for a quick kill, Buhler throwing into the end zone. But Manning snatched the pass away.

I’m just thinking, ‘My gosh, they score here and the game will be 7-7.’ ” Dorrel said. “Then, the momentum swung and we turned around and picked that football off. After that, I had just a tremendous sense of confidence. . . . I was, like, ‘We’re ready to play. They’re going to pick us up.’ ”

Adams and the offense responded again, moving 80 yards on 11 plays with James Franklin scoring on a seven-yard run to make it 14-0. Some 3½ minutes later, DeJong picked off Piper and returned it 17 yards to the Washburn 22.

Franklin carried three more times, the last five yards for a TD that made it 21-0.

“We feed off the defense,” Franklin said. “If they can make any kind of play – make a stop, make a big hit, an interception – our offense loves to see that. And we like to return the favor.”

The junior running back from Olathe, Kan., continued a late-season surge. His two TDs gave him seven in his last three games against Pittsburg State, Missouri Southern and Washburn. They also gave him a career total of 34, moving him past Derek Lane and teammate Jordan Simmons into fourth place in NMSU history.

Simmons, a senior, ran for his 33rd from one yard out late in the first half.

Adams, meanwhile, extended his own hot streak to five games – dating to his late-September return to the lineup from an ankle injury. He has completed 70.3 percent of his passes for 1,220 yards and 14 TDs in that stretch.

The junior from Odessa, Texas, was 19-for-26 for 216 yards and three TDs Saturday. “I think he’s playing inside himself more,” Dorrel said, “and I think he’s counting on the people around him more.”

Adams and the Bearcats didn’t merely get through what looked to be a challenging October. They crushed it.

The past four weeks took them to Edmond, Okla., and Kansas City, then to Joplin and finally Topeka. They beat Central Oklahoma, Pittsburg State, Missouri Southern and Washburn by an average of almost 37 points.

It was only the fourth time in Northwest’s 96-year football-playing history that it ran that kind of gauntlet – stringing four games away from home – and won them all. The first, in 1984, led to the Bearcats’ first appearance in the Division II playoffs. The next two propelled them to the national championship game.

In 2008, they pulled off the road-trip sweep in September and October and kept winning until running into Minnesota-Duluth in Florence, Ala. In 2005, they rolled through four playoff games on the road en route to a title-game matchup and four-point loss against Grand Valley State.

“We’ve come a long way in those four road games,” Adams said. “I feel like it really helped us find our identity of who we are as a team, knowing we don’t have to be at home to take it to anybody. We can go in anywhere and take care of business.”

The next two weeks, finally, it will be at home.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest volleyball stays hot with 3-1 win at Southern

The Northwest Missouri State volleyball extended its winning streak to three games as the defense shined in a 3-1 win over Missouri Southern Saturday evening at the Leggett and Platt Athletic Center.

Northwest improved to 14-13 overall and 8-6 in the MIAA as the Lions remained winless on the year at 0-26 and 0-14. The Bearcats return home for the first of two final regular season home matches as they face first place Central Missouri Wednesday night at Bearcat Arena.

As a team the Bearcats recorded eight blocks and held Missouri Southern to a sub .100 hitting percentage in the win. Northwest raced out to a lead taking the first two sets before the Lions stole the third set, however the Bearcats dominated the fourth set to take the match 25-20, 25-20, 22-25, 25-18.

Tori Beckman led the Bearcat defense with 30 digs, as the senior continues to lead the MIAA with 5.54 digs per set.

Offensively, Abby Graves led Northwest in kills for the second straight night with 16 as sophomore teammate, Brooke Bartosh added 12.

The Bearcats sit in sixth place and continue to hold onto a spot in the MIAA postseason tournament as the top eight teams earn a berth. With just four games remaining, three of Northwest’s final four opponents all sit above them in the league standings.

Wednesday’s first serve against the Jennies from Bearcat Arena is slated for 7 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest volleyball defeats Lindenwood, 3-1

Using a combination of solid offense and defense the Northwest Missouri State volleyball team knocked off Lindenwood 3-1 Friday night at Robert F. Hyland Arena.

Northwest saw its record move back to the .500 mark at 13-13 and improved to 7-6 in MIAA play. The Bearcats keep their postseason tournament hopes alive as the Lions fell to 13-13 overall and 3-9 in league play.

An outstanding offensive effort helped pace the Bearcats to the 20-25, 25-15, 25-16, 25-23 victory.

A trio of Bearcats recorded double figure kills as Bridget Hanafin controlled the offense with 46 assists and 12 digs for her second double-double of the year.

Abby Graves led Northwest with 16 kills as Brooke Bartosh added 15. Shelby Duren knocked down 12 kills in the win.

Northwest continued to eliminate unforced errors as the Bearcats rallied to hit .249 on the night after a slow start.

The defensive side of the net was also outstanding for Northwest as they tallied 10 blocks as a team with Lindsey Schlake and Bartosh holding off five apiece. Hanafin and Mackie Keller added four blocks each.

The Bearcats make a quick turnaround as they travel to Missouri Southern (0-25, 0-13) Saturday to face the winless Lions. First serve is set for 6 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Griffon volleyball gets swept by Northwest Missouri State

The Missouri Western volleyball struggles continued Tuesday evening falling in three straight sets (25-14, 25-22, 25-23) against rival Northwest Missouri State University. The Griffons have lost five matches in a row falling to 12-13 overall and 3-9 in MIAA play.

In set one the two teams played to a 6-6 tie after service ace by MWSU’s Sarah Faubel. From there it would be all Bearcats closing the set on a 19-8 run winning the set by 11.

The Griffons struggled early in set two getting down 12-6. The Griffons responded nicely going on a 9-3 run tying the score at 15 after a kill by Faubel. The set went back and forth the rest of the way and with the score tied at 21 the offense went cold for MWSU. The Griffons scored just one pont the rest of the way falling 25-22 getting down 2-0 in the match.

In the final set the Griffons trailed by as many as six numerous times. The Griffons put a mini run together down the stretch but it wasn’t enough as they fell 25-23. The Bearcats improved to 12-13 overall and 6-6 in the MIAA with the win.

Amanda Boender paced the Griffons with ten kills while Stephanie Hattey had 29 set assists and Holly Pollock had 15 digs.

Abby Graves led the way for Northwest with a match high 18 kills. Bridget Hanafin had 42 set assists while Tori Beckman had 25 digs.

The Griffons return to MIAA play on Friday, October 26 with an MIAA match against Missouri Southern in Joplin, Mo. Match time is set for 7:00 pm.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bearcats stay hot with victory at Missouri Southern

With the NCAA’s first regional rankings due in a couple of days and a Division II playoff race beginning to warm, this was no time for a letdown.

And no way was it the place.

Northwest Missouri State hasn’t lost in Missouri Southern’s Fred Hughes Stadium – hasn’t fallen to the Lions anywhere – since 1994, tying the longest chokehold it has put on any Mid-America Athletic Association rival. Saturday was more of the same. The Bearcats got a precisioned passing performance from quarterback Trevor Adams and three rushing touchdowns from James Franklin, put the triple-option-running Lions in an early 14-point hole and rolled to a 38-14 victory.

They’ve won the last six games in the two schools’ series by an average of more than 31 points.

There was no visible hangover from an emotional win a week earlier over then-unbeaten and top-ranked Pittsburg State. While Adams and the offense scored on four of their first five possessions, the defense bent a little against Southern’s triple option – allowing a season-high 253 yards on the ground – but harassed Lions quarterback Kellen Cox into an 0-for-11 passing day, intercepting him twice.

“When they did try to throw, our D-line was in the backfield causing havoc,” said senior safety Nate DeJong, whose first-quarter interception set up the first Northwest score. “He was kind of running for his life.”

DeJong and the Bearcats (7-1 overall, 6-1 in the MIAA) continued their push for an eighth berth in the Division II playoffs in as many years.

They have little room for error in either the conference or the NCAA’s power-packed Super Region 3, which accounted for 11 of the top 25 teams in the coaches’ poll going into Saturday. Northwest travels next weekend to Washburn, then closes its regular season with games at home vs. Emporia State and Missouri Western.

Those three remaining opponents are a combined 22-2.

With much of the meat of his team’s schedule ahead, Northwest coach Adam Dorrel isn’t counting on a lofty initial ranking. “We’re not going to be in the top six,” he said. “. . . But the approach I think I’ll end up taking is: Don’t worry about it. If you do what you’re supposed to do, it’ll all work out in the end.

“I’ll just tell our team, ‘Guys, we’ve never not made the playoffs when we were supposed to.’ ”

Missouri Southern (5-3, 4-3) was coming off its own eye-opening victory, a 31-30 upset of Missouri Western in St. Joseph. But this one got away from the Lions – or rather was taken away – quickly.

Scouts from the NFL’s New York Giants and Seattle Seahawks were on hand to get a look at Southern’s two-time All-American tackle and NFL draft pick-in-waiting, Brandon Williams. What they got instead was an early eyeful of Adams who completed 19 of his first 23 passes for 226 yards and a TD– all before the end of the first half.

He finished 25-for-33 for 292 yards.

Southern’s Cox, a 5-10 senior converted from receiver this season, had a very different kind of afternoon. His very first pass was picked off by DeJong, setting the Bearcats up at their own 49-yard line. Less than three minutes later, Franklin ran it in from the 1 for a 7-0 lead.

The Bearcats then added a 12-play, 80-yard drive, Jordan Simmons finishing it with a two-yard TD run.

“Our offense did an awesome job of putting them in a hole early,” said junior defensive end Ricky Bailey.”An option team like that, they’re very time-dependent. They like to run time off the clock. But when they’re in the hole, they can’t do that.”

Southern ground out a touchdown drive late in the first and early in the second quarter, cutting the margin to 14-7. But Northwest Missouri answered with a 12-play, 76-yard drive, Adams hitting tight end Joel Gantz in the back of the end zone for a three-yard TD.

A 22-yard field goal by Todd Adolf made it 24-7 before halftime.

The Bearcats put together 76- and 62-yard touchdown drives in the second half, eating up time that Southern’s offense so desperately needed.

The Lions didn’t complete a pass until a little more than four minutes remained, and that was by freshman backup quarterback Jay McDowell. For a mere five yards. Their running game, while covering some ground, also suffered six fumbles – all recovered by Southern but setbacks nonetheless.

Northwest’s lead ballooned to 38-7 before Southern tacked on a meaningless touchdown with 2:57 left.

“The strength of this football team is our defense. To get where we want to get, those guys have got to play like they’ve played every week,” Dorrel said. “. . . (It was) a solid performance from them again. And I thought it was a gutsy performance.

His team is now three-quarters through a crucial four-week stretch on the road.

“One of the things we talk about,” Dorrel said, “is ‘let’s be perfect in October.’ I felt like if we could do that, we’d have a chance.

“I’m just so proud of our kids, the way they’ve gone the first three weeks. Now, we’ve got a tough, tough football game next week in Topeka.”

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Northwest Missouri State volleyball falls to Emporia State, 3-1

The Northwest Missouri State volleyball team could not complete a comeback Saturday falling 3-1 to Emporia State in MIAA volleyball action.

Northwest fell to 11-13 on the year and 5-6 in league play as their losing skid hit six games on Saturday. The Lady Hornets improved to 17-7 overall and 6-4 in conference play as the Bearcats return home for an important matchup with rival Missouri Western on Tuesday.

The Bearcats looked improved on both sides of the net as they took the first set 25-20, but was not able to build on the momentum falling in the final three sets, 25-19, 27-25, 25-20.

The Lady Hornets seemed to be just one step ahead of the Bearcats most of the afternoon. Northwest rallied in the third set for a 24-24 tie and were poised to take a 2-1 lead in the match, however ESU answered with a short run to hold on for the win.

Three Bearcats tallied double figure kills led by Shelby Duren with 14. Brooke Bartosh and Mackie Keller added 12 each.

Bridget Hanafin recorded her first double-double of the year with 39 assists and 12 digs in the loss.

Northwest faces a tough final stretch with only three of their final seven games at home starting Tuesday against the Griffons. First serve from Bearcat Arena is set for 7 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

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