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Griffons get blanked in season finale by No. 18 Northwest Missouri State

ST. JOSEPH – Griffon football (4-7) ended the 2017 season with a 30-0 loss to No. 18 Northwest Missouri (9-2) on Saturday.

Northwest Missouri marched down the field and scored on the opening possession of the game and never looked back, out-gaining the Griffons by 200 yards (386-186). While the Griffons struggled to move the ball against the top rated defense in the nation, its special teams put Missouri Western’s defense in a pickle. Northwest Missouri blocked three Griffon punts. The Griffons also lost four fumbles in the game, fumbling on three-straight third quarter possessions.

Missouri Western gained most of its offensive yardage in the third quarter. The Griffons rushed for 109 yards in the game, getting 51 from Shamar Griffith and 50 from Dom Marino. Through the air, Marino was 8-for-33 for 80 yards with an interception. Elijah Cunningham caught two passes for 34 yards.

The defense did its best to keep the game close. Cody Lindsay had a career-high 16 tackles with a sack and 2.5 tackles for loss. The senior linebacker was also credited with four quarterback hurries. Jonathan Owens finished with 13 tackles, one sack, two tackles for loss, a forced fumble and a pass break up. Missouri Western forced three Bearcat fumbles and recovered two. They also had three sacks in the game.

It was the fifth-straight loss for the Griffons, the second straight year the team lost its last five games and finished 4-7.

— MWSU Athletics —

Mizzou blows out Tennessee for fourth consecutive win

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Ish Witter gashed Tennessee’s defense for 216 yards rushing as Missouri cruised to a 50-17 victory on Saturday night.

In his final home game, Witter averaged 9.0 yards per carry and scored a touchdown while exceeding 2,000 rushing yards for his career.

It was a good night to be a Missouri running back, as Larry Rountree carried 18 times for 155 yards and a touchdown. The Tigers (5-5, 2-4 Southeastern Conference) dominated the line of scrimmage, with both running backs often reaching the secondary before they were touched. The Volunteers (4-6, 0-6) compounded their problems with numerous missed tackles.

Missouri racked up 433 yards rushing and 226 yards passing. In its last two games against Tennessee, the Tigers have gained a combined 1,399 yards.

Missouri’s Drew Lock completed 13 of 28 passes for 217 yards with four touchdowns. Emanuel Hall caught five passes for 102 yards and two touchdowns. He would have had a much bigger game if not for three drops, including one sure touchdown.

Tennessee was probably happy every time the Tigers decided to throw, considering they averaged 8.2 yards per rush. Nigel Warrior intercepted Lock in the first quarter and scored on a weaving 70-yard return, helping the Volunteers tie the game at 7.

Freshman Will McBride, whose redshirt was pulled last week, became Tennessee’s third starting quarterback this season, following Quinten Dormady and Jarrett Guarantano. McBride showed his toughness late in the first half when he absorbed a huge hit from safety Anthony Sherrils but bounced back to convert on fourth-and-2 with a 22-yard pass to Brandon Johnson. Then he released a 19-yard touchdown pass to tight end Ethan Wolf just before being knocked flat on his back by defensive tackle Terry Beckner Jr.

It was the Volunteers’ first touchdown pass since Sept. 23, ending a five-game drought. That tied the game at 17 with 1:15 left in the half. But Tennessee yielded a 64-yard Rountree run that set up his 1-yard touchdown plunge with 18 seconds left before intermission.

The Tigers dominated the second half, thanks in part to a defense that forced four turnovers, including three takeaways on three straight Tennessee snaps. Sherrils started that binge with an interception and finished it by ripping the ball from running back Carlin Fils-aime and recovering the fumble.

McBride completed 16 of 32 passes for 139 yards, with two interceptions. Missouri sacked him five times, including two each by Marcell Frazier and Tre Williams.

THE TAKEWAY

Missouri: The Tigers have won four straight games and dominated all of them. Their average margin of victory during the streak is 37 points.

Tennessee: The lopsided loss will only add to the heat on embattled coach Butch Jones. The Volunteers need to win their final two games to qualify for a bowl.

UP NEXT

Missouri: The Tigers will try to become eligible for a bowl next week when it visits Vanderbilt (4-6, 0-6) on Saturday.

Tennessee: The Volunteers will finish the regular season with two home games, beginning Saturday with a visit from No. 24 LSU (7-3, 4-2).

— Associated Press —

MWSU women move to 2-0 with 16 point win at Upper Iowa

FAYETTE, Iowa – The Griffon women’s basketball team moved to 2-0 with a convincing, 65-49 win at Upper Iowa (0-2), Saturday evening.

Missouri Western took a 33-25 lead to the break, then really opened the game up, outscoring the Peacocks by 11 in the third quarter (22-11).

KEY STATS
– Missouri Western forced 31 Peacock turnovers, including 18 steals

– MWSU scored 38 points off turnovers to just 10 for Upper Iowa

– The Griffons shot 40.3 percent from the field on the night

– Brittany Atkins scored 12 points in just 15 minutes on the court

– The Griffons got 14 fast break points

LEADERS
– Dossou Ndiaye led the team with 14 points and six rebounds

– Melia Richardson had a team-high six assists to go with her eight points

– Katrina Roenfeldt led the Griffons with five steals and added nine points

UP NEXT
The Griffons make their home debut, Wednesday, Nov. 15 when the join the Griffon men for a non-conference doubleheader against William Jewell. The women’s game is set to tip off at 5:30 p.m. in the MWSU Fieldhouse.

— MWSU Athletics —

K-State comes up short against No. 23 West Virginia

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Will Grier scrambled to his right and then retreated to his left, time ticking off the clock in the first half and No. 23 West Virginia seemingly content to take a one-point lead over Kansas State into halftime.

Then Grier unloaded a pass toward the end zone.

Ka’Raun White never had to move to haul in his second touchdown reception.

The half-ending score, after a crippling interception thrown by Skylar Thompson, gave the Mountaineers a lift going into the break. And their defense did the rest in the second half, holding on to escape with a 28-23 victory and their Big 12 title hopes intact.

“It was a weird game,” Mountaineers coach Dana Holgorsen said. “I don’t quite know how we won it other than our defense playing their tail off. The offense was hot and cold. But we made some big plays.”

Few bigger than that 30-yard TD pass for a 28-20 halftime lead.

Grier finished with 372 yards and four touchdowns passing for the Mountaineers (7-3, 5-2), while White had eight catches for 168 yards. David Sills V had the other two TD receptions, one a tip-toe job in the corner of the end zone, and Justin Crawford added 113 yards on the ground.

“It was a big game,” Mountaineers linebacker David Long said, “and they were going to make plays.”

Indeed, the Wildcats closed to 28-23 on Matt McCrane’s field goal early in the fourth quarter, but an offense down to its third-string QB in Thompson couldn’t get all the way back.

Thompson threw for 159 yards with two interceptions in his first career start for the Wildcats (5-5, 3-4), who still need a win to become bowl-eligible for the eighth consecutive year. Dalvin Warmack added 96 yards rushing and bruising fullback Winston Dimel reached the end zone twice.

“It was in our hands,” Kansas State coach Bill Snyder said. “It was ours to win or lose.”

The nip-and-tuck game was indicative of the series: The last three meetings had been decided by eight points total, including the Mountaineers’ 17-16 comeback win in Morgantown last year.

They tried to fumble this one away early, coughing it up twice in the damp, cold weather. Grier also threw a pair of first-half interceptions, one of which was returned inside their 5.

But Kansas State kept stumbling while trying to take advantage of the mistakes.

The Wildcats had to settle for a pair of early field goals, which West Virginia wiped out with a 75-yard touchdown pass from Grier to White, and Sills added his two TD catches to extend the lead.

Still, Kansas State got within 21-20 and had the ball in the closing seconds of the first half when Thompson was picked off on a poorly designed screen play. West Virginia had time for one play, and Grier scrambled long enough to find White in the end zone.

“Will is very good at extending plays,” Sills said. “He always keeps his eyes downfield. He can run, but when he scrambles he is looking to throw downfield. It resulted in a lot of big plays.”

The Wildcats’ defense stiffened in the second half, but their offense still couldn’t do much. McCrane missed a 32-yard field goal — Snyder argued in vain that it went through the uprights — before hitting from 29 yards to make it 28-23 with 12:44 to go.

Kansas State was trying to take the lead when Thompson was picked off by Kenny Robinson deep in West Virginia territory. And even though the Wildcats’ defense forced a quick punt, the turnover flipped the field with about 6 minutes remaining, emboldening the Mountaineers’ defense.

They forced a punt of their own, and Grier converted on fourth down with 2:29 left, allowing West Virginia to run out the clock at the Kansas State goal line.

“This one will hurt us for a while,” said McCrane, who broke Martin Gramatica’s school record of 54 career field goals. “We know we need to get some wins.”

TAKEAWAYS

West Virginia overcame four turnovers and some uncharacteristic dropped passes. Gary Jennings was a big part of the success, catching 13 passes for 115 yards as the Wildcats bottled up the run early and tried to take White and Sills away in the passing game.

Kansas State’s defense, which had surrendered at least 400 yards passing in three straight games, was good enough to keep it close. But the offense struggled behind an inexperienced quarterback who made several poor decisions and often held onto the ball too long.

UP NEXT

West Virginia heads home to face Texas on Saturday before a trip to No. 5 Oklahoma.

Kansas State plays its road finale against No. 12 Oklahoma State on Saturday.

— Associated Press —

Bearcat volleyball takes down Fort Hays State in four sets

The Northwest Missouri State University volleyball team defeated Fort Hays State, 3-1, on Saturday at Bearcat Arena in Maryville, Mo.
– Northwest improves to 17-14 overall and 11-7 in conference play to finish the season. Fort Hays ends the season with an 11-23 mark and a 2-16 MIAA record.
– Maddy Bruder had 17 kills with 19 digs, three blocks and added an assist.
– Prior to the match, the Bearcats honored Taylor Linenberger, Gaby da Silva, Sarah Dannettell and Darcy Sunderman as part of Senior Day.

Key Northwest Statistics
– The Bearcats won the first set, 25-11, but dropped the second, 25-21. Northwest finished the match by winning the second and third sets by scores of 25-16 and 25-12.
– For the match, the Bearcats hit .243 while holding the Tigers to just a .019 attack percentage, forcing 32 errors.
– Northwest had 11 blocks to Fort Hays State’s six.
– Sofia Schleppenbach had 15 kills with nine blocks and two digs. She hit .379 for the match with just four attacking errors.
– Olivia Nowakowski had 27 digs with four assists.
– Maddy Ahrens had 33 assists with 11 digs, two service aces and a kill.
– Dannettell had 16 assists with three digs, two blocks and two kills.
– Da Silva had nine digs with four kills and a block.
– Morgan Lewis added nine kills with two digs and a block.

Key Northwest Sequence
– In the fourth set, Fort Hays jumped out to an early 10-7 lead. But Northwest came roaring back. Bruder had a pair of kills with a Tiger attack error in between to make it 10-10, forcing a timeout. Bruder and Schleppenbach each added kills before Fort Hays was able to get a point back at 12-11. But another Bruder kill gave the possession back to Northwest at 13-11. With Ahrens on the service line, the Bearcats would record seven-straight points before the Tigers managed to get a kill to make it 20-12. That would be the last Fort Hays point as Northwest closed the match out on a 5-0 run, capped by a block by Linenberger and Schleppenbach on match point.

Up Next
– Northwest will now await seeding in the MIAA tournament. The first round will be played at campus sites on Tuesday, Nov. 14.

— Northwest Athletics —

Kansas loses at Texas 42-27

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — The Texas program has been down so low for the past three seasons, just making a bowl game would feel like a victory in itself.

The Longhorns inched a bit closer to that goal Saturday night with a 42-27 win over Kansas, a tougher-than-expected result that left first-year coach Tom Herman fully aware that nothing about the post-season is certain for a team with two tough games left on the schedule. Texas hasn’t played in a bowl since the 2014 season.

“Winning for us right now is going to be hard and that’s OK, as long as we win,” Herman said. “(A bowl) is something that our seniors truly deserve.”

Texas (5-5, 4-3 Big 12) made the big plays it needed early against Kansas (1-9, 0-7) then did just enough to keep the Jayhawks from repeating their shocking upset win last season that ultimately doomed then-Texas coach Charlie Strong, who was fired barely a week later.

Shane Buechele connected with Lorenzo Joe on a 49-yard touchdown on the first play from scrimmage and the Texas defense forced four first-half turnovers in a 42-27 win over Kansas on Saturday night.

Antwuan Davis returned a first quarter interception for a touchdown and Toneil Carter and Lil’Jordan Humphrey added scoring runs as Texas built a 35-17 lead by halftime.

Texas set up three first-half touchdowns with turnovers and ended another Kansas drive in the end zone with an interception. Carter Stanley passed for 268 yards and three touchdowns, but had three turnovers in the first half. The Jayhawks (1-9, 0-7) have just three Big 12 wins over the past seven seasons.

Buechele passed for 249 yards.

THE TAKEAWAY

Kansas: The Jayhawks had been shut out in their previous two Big 12 road games, but fought to stay in this one if not for the disastrous first half of turnovers. The defense even knocked around Buechele and dropped an interception that would have been a sure-fire touchdown. Of Texas’ first four touchdown drives, only one started beyond midfield.

“I think we left a lot of chances out there,” Kansas coach David Beaty said. “I’ll say this about Carter Stanley: that might be one of the toughest cats I’ve ever been around. They knocked the fool out of that guy today. He is bleeding from every part of his body, and he gets up.”

Texas: The Longhorns offense still struggled for long stretches and the defense had one of its more uneven outings in weeks, giving Herman something new to worry about in a late-season fight for a bowl game. The secondary clearly missed suspended cornerback Holton Hill, who will not return this season. A change at kicker resulted in another missed field goal.

ONSIDE FAIL

Enduring yet another woeful season, Kansas came in looking for any spark of life. The Jayhawks tried an onside kick at the start of the game. It was easily smothered by Texas’ John Burt and the Longhorns were quickly up 7-0 when Buechele found Joe wide open with a deep throw across the middle.

DEFENSIVE SCORES:

Davis’ touchdown interception return was the Longhorns’ fifth of the season, tying a school record last accomplished in 2000. It was also the senior’s first career interception. Despite its struggles on offense much of this season, Texas has scored seven non-offensive touchdowns. Davis also recovered a fumble that set up a second quarter touchdown and got the interception that killed a promising Kansas drive late in the second quarter.

“All I could see was the end zone. I saw the whole D-line blocking,” Davis said about his weaving sprint to the end zone on his interception.

“When you’re playing to win, scoring points on defense and getting turnovers, that’s a big part of that,” Herman said.

UP NEXT

Kansas plays No. 5 Oklahoma next Saturday.

Texas plays at West Virginia next Saturday with a chance to earn a sixth win to become bowl-eligible.

— Associated Press —

Northwest women fall to Henderson State

The Northwest Missouri State University women’s basketball team fell to Henderson State, 75-63, on Saturday at the Meyer Sports Center in Bolivar, Mo.
– The Bearcats are now 0-2 on the year while Henderson State improves to 1-1.
– Tanya Meyer recorded a double-double, leading all scorers with 21 points and a career-high 18 rebounds. She was 4-of-4 from the charity stripe and added a steal.

Key Northwest Statistics
– The Bearcats shot 40.7 percent from the field (24-59) and were 12-of-14 (85.7 percent) from the free throw line.
– Northwest held a 13-12 lead after the first quarter.
– Arbrie Benson scored 17 points, going 6-of-9 from the field and 5-of-6 from the free throw line. She added six rebounds and five assists.

Key Northwest Sequence
– The Reddies jumped out to an early 11-4 lead in the first quarter but the Bearcats finished the frame strong. Benson converted an and-one off an assist from Zoie Hayward. Mallory McConkey came up with a steal and converted the bucket on the other end to make it an 11-9 game. On HSU’s next trip down, it was McConkey again coming up with a defensive stop, blocking a Hailey Estes shot. Northwest would get a layup from Meyer on the next possession to tie the game, 11-11. Henderson State would get a free throw to take a one point lead but with just one second left on the clock, Hayward made a layup to give the Bearcats a 13-12 advantage heading into the break.

Up Next
– Northwest will host Peru State this Wednesday, Nov. 15, in the Bearcats’ home opener. Tip off is scheduled for 7 p.m.

— Northwest Athletics —

Nebraska gets run over by Croft, Minnesota 54-21

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Minnesota coach P.J. Fleck said he watched quarterback Demry Croft run read-option plays with running back Rodney Smith on Saturday and twice yelled “fumble” into his headset.

Croft had the Gophers’ first-year coach as confused as Nebraska.

Croft ran for 183 yards and three touchdowns, Smith added 134 yards rushing and a 100-yard kickoff return for a touchdown, and Minnesota ran over the Cornhuskers 54-21 on Saturday.

Kobe McCrary had 93 yards rushing and three touchdowns for the Gophers, who finished with season highs of 409 yards rushing — eighth-most in school history — and 514 yards of total offense. Minnesota scored its most points in a Big Ten game since a 63-26 win against Indiana in 2006.

“We had this since training camp, really,” Croft said. “We just put it all together, all three phases of the game, today.”

Croft’s big day included an untouched, 73-yard touchdown run up the middle for a 20-7 lead at the start of the second quarter and he had a 64-yard scamper in the fourth as he set a school record for rushing yards in a game by a quarterback.

“I thought he did a great job deciding when to pull it and when deciding not to pull it,” Fleck said of Croft running the read option. “I think that’s where the growth has come from. . The decision on him being able to pull it, he made those decisions. Weeks in the past, he didn’t make those decisions as well.”

The Gophers (5-5, 2-5 Big Ten) held Nebraska to 69 yards rushing on 33 attempts.

Redshirt freshman JD Spielman, a Minnesota native and the son of Vikings general manager Rick Spielman, caught nine passes for 141 yards for the Huskers (4-6, 3-4).

Smith set the tone for the day by taking the opening kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown, the first time the Gophers returned an opening kickoff for a score since 1998 when Tyrone Carter had an 86-yard touchdown return.

“It started bad and went from there,” Nebraska coach Mike Riley said. “The opening kickoff was really a setback for us. It didn’t have to be a killer. I thought we responded really well, and then we responded again after that and then got stopped on fourth down, and we never really did stop them from there.”

EARLY SWING

The game might have turned on a defensive play by Minnesota early in the second quarter.

The Huskers came back after Smith’s kick return touchdown with a 12-play, 75-yard drive that ended in a touchdown run by Mikale Wilbon. After Croft finished a similar drive with a touchdown run, Nebraska was challenging again.

But Wilbon was stuffed on fourth-and-1 from the Minnesota 6-yard line by safety Duke McGee, and the Gophers pulled away from there.

CHANGE AT QUARTERBACK

Huskers sophomore quarterback Tanner Lee was 13-of-18 passing for 174 yards and a touchdown but was held out the second half. Riley said Lee was dealing with an “impact migraine” from a hit in the game.

Redshirt freshman Patrick O’Brien replaced him and was 12 of 18 for 137 yards passing.

THE TAKEAWAY

Nebraska: The Huskers have two games left — at No. 16 Penn State and at home against No. 25 Iowa — and need wins in both to become bowl eligible. Nebraska hasn’t missed a bowl since Bill Callahan’s final season as coach in 2007, when it went 5-7. The Huskers need a win to avoid their first four-win season since 1960. The ineptitude has made coach Mike Riley the target after Bill Moos replaced Shawn Eichorst as the athletic director in October.

Minnesota: Bowl eligibility is looking more likely in Fleck’s first season. The Gophers’ performance against Nebraska is the type that can give them hope going to Northwestern next week before finishing at home against No. 6 Wisconsin. There’s an outside chance of Minnesota still earning a bowl bid with its five wins due to the NCAA’s Academic Progress Rate in which the Gophers are tied for fourth. The APR standings are used if there aren’t enough six-win teams to fill the bowl requirements.

UP NEXT

Nebraska travels to Penn State on Nov. 18.

Minnesota looks for its sixth win at Northwestern next week.

Griffons lose season opener to Winona State in OT 71-67

ST. JOSEPH – The Missouri Western men’s basketball team (0-1) fell to Winona State (1-0) 71-67 in overtime to start the 2017-18 season in the 26th Annual Hillyard Classic.

DOWN TO THE WIRE
A pair of Seth Bonifas free-throws with 54 seconds remaining in the second half allowed Missouri Western to tie the game at 60. After a defensive stop, Trey Brown hit Bonifas inside the lane to give MWSU a 62-60 advantage with 10 seconds remaining. Out of a timeout, Winona State’s Connor Flack was able to force overtime with a coast-to-coast layup. The Warriors outscored the Griffons 9-5 in the overtime period.

COLD NIGHT
Despite a career-high 21 points from Seth Bonifas, the Griffons were cold on the evening. Missouri Western was just 21.7 percent from the three-point arc and 35 percent from the field. MWSU hit just five three’s in the loss. Last week in an exhibition game, the Griffons connected on 14 three-pointers.

UP NEXT
Missouri Western hosts Upper Iowa at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 12 in the MWSU Fieldhouse. It will be the second game of the day in the 26th Annual Hillyard Classic.

 

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 1 Bearcats roll to season opening win against Upper Iowa

By David Boyce – Northwest Athletics

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. – Although not in midseason form, Northwest Missouri State’s men’s basketball team put together a nice game Friday afternoon. The Bearcats, coming off a 35-1, national championship season, beat Upper Iowa 89-65 at the 26th annual Hillyard Tip-Off Classic at the Missouri Western Fieldhouse.

Northwest, which needed overtime to beat Upper Iowa in the first round of the NCAA Division II Tournament last season, never trailed in the season-opening game for both teams.

The outcome was more reminiscent of last year’s opener when Northwest defeated Upper Iowa 87-52. Understandably, the Bearcats weren’t as crisp. They lost three key seniors from last year.

“We were okay,” Northwest coach Ben McCollum said. “I think the expectation for myself and the players was we were just going to come in and click on all cylinders right away. That was not the case.”

Northwest started four players with considerable championship experience, which includes senior Justin Pitts, the Division II national player of the year from last year. Pitts was definitely in top form, finishing with a game-high 30 points on 12 of 19 shooting.

“Overall, I think we did pretty good,” Pitts said. “We got a little sluggish in the first half. We picked it up in the second half and played a better second half than the first.”

Junior Joey Witthus is the newcomer in the starting group of Pitts, and seniors Chris-Ebou Ndow, Xavier Kurth, and Brett Dougherty. And they rolled together quite well midway through the second half when the Bearcats opened up a sizeable lead.

“We do have a lot of returners, but we are playing a lot of new guys,” McCollum said. “You saw that today. It was a good victory. I don’t think the score was indicative of how close the game actually was. We need to get everybody involved. We didn’t play with the intensity I wanted them to play with today.”

The best sequence came when Northwest made four crisp passes that led to a wide-open three-point attempt from Ryan Welty. The shot hit off the front of the rim, but Dougherty was there to dunk the ball, giving Northwest a 59-45 lead.

Several minutes later, Witthus, a transfer from Minnesota State, hit his first three-pointer in a Northwest uniform. His trey put Northwest ahead 69-47.

“I know these guys will get me the ball when I am open,” Witthus said. “It felt good to be out there. These guys play so well together. They move the ball. It is just so much fun to play with a group like this. They get after it on defense.”

As for the core four, they each had their moments. Ndow had 20 and Dougherty added 13. Kurth played strong defense and scored seven. Also, the bench performed well, showing that this might be Northwest’s deepest team in the McCollum era.

It was going so well for Northwest that freshman guard Daric Laing came off the bench and banked in two three-pointers in the final two minutes.

“It feels good to actually play a game because we were getting a little tired of playing against each other every day,” Pitts said. “It felt good to get the win and play against another team.”

Northwest scored the first seven points of the game and maintained the lead for the rest of the half, taking a 41-31 lead into halftime.

In Northwest fashion, three different Bearcats scored the first three field goals. Pitts opened the scoring with a two-point field goal, followed by a three-pointer from Ndow. Dougherty concluded the early run with a strong move in the paint for a bucket.

After Pitts hit a three-pointer to push Northwest’s lead to 14-5, the Peacocks fought back and closed to 14-12. They matched Northwest over the next 7 minutes.

Leading 30-28, Northwest put together a nice spurt to close out the first half. It started with a basket from Kurth hit a three-pointer and Pitts made another driving layup, extending Northwest’s advantage to 37-28.

Northwest’s lead grew to double digits for the first time on a basket by Pitts, making it 41-30.

“This was a good test for us, for sure,” Witthus said. “We need to make sure we come out and compete and have fun.”

— Northwest Athletics —

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