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MWSU volleyball stays hot with sweep of No. 16 Central Missouri

ST. JOSEPH – For the first time since 2003, Griffon volleyball (18-9) swept #16 Central Missouri (20-7). Missouri Western extended its current winning streak to seven matches and clinched a home match in the MIAA tournament.

CHIPPED AWAY
Early in the first set, the Jennies looked poised to run away with the match holding a 10-5 lead. A UCM attack error midway through the set allowed the Griffons to tie the match at 16-16. Trailing 22-20, Lauren Murphy found a gap in the Jennies defense that allowed Missouri Western to win theset on a 5-0 run.

STUFFED
Missouri Western threw a block party at the net against #16 Central Missouri. The Griffons finished with 11 total blocks and outblocked the Jennies by seven total blocks. Ali Tauchen finished with 10 total blocks, second most for program history in a three-set match. Lauren Murphy and Shellby Taylor each had three block assists in the match as well.

DECISIVE DEFENSE
MWSU’s defense showed up clutch in the match. Missouri Western held Central Missouri to hit .103 in the match, its second lowest output of the season. UCM hit .098 in the first set and -.024 for the second set. The Griffons forced the Jennies to commit 34 errors, 22 attack errors and 12 service errors.

UP NEXT
The Griffons begin their final road trip of the season on Nov. 3 as they head to Joplin, Missouri for a 7 p.m. match against Missouri Southern.

— MWSU Athletics —

Lock throws for 5 TDs as Missouri routs UConn 52-12

STORRS, Conn. (AP) — Drew Lock threw for 377 yards and five touchdowns and Missouri routed Connecticut 52-12 on Saturday night, winning back-to-back games for the first time since the start of the 2015 season.

Lock, who played just under three quarters, picked apart the nation’s worst pass defense, finishing with a career high 31 completions on 37 attempts.

“We’re talking about our outside guys being able to run by anybody,” Lock said. “And then being able to take the hitches all night made my job a lot easier, because you get 6 or 7 on those, miss a tackle and you get a first down on those as well. That just allowed us to get in our shots a little more.”

The Tigers (3-5) gave up a safety after an errant snap on the opening drive, then scored on their next five possessions to lead 31-5 at halftime.

Lock completed 14 of 15 passes in the first quarter, three of them for touchdowns, including two to freshman tight end Albert Okwuegbunam.

He also hit J’Mon Moore for two scores and hooked up with Johnathon Johnson for a 72-yard catch and run in the third quarter.

The Tigers had 583 yards of offense, 408 through the air.

“I think when the offense is going that spreads throughout the entire team and sideline,” said coach Barry Odom. “(Drew)’s got a really high skill set and receivers are catching the ball well.

Bryant Shirreffs completed 19 of 39 passes for 202 yards for UConn (3-5), but was sacked five times. The Tigers also had nine tackles for loss.

“We’re not going to show this film to these guys,” UConn coach Randy Edsall said. “We’re going to move forward and just make sure we have the right guys out there.”

THE TAKEAWAY

Missouri: Lock becomes the first Missouri quarterback to throw for at least five touchdowns five times. He has 7,298 yards passing and now trails only Brad Smith (8,799 yards) and Chase Daniel (12,515 yards) on Missouri’s all-time passing list.

“That’s really cool to me, growing up a huge Missouri Tiger fan, watching all those guys,” Lock said. “Putting my name with those guys, that’s the biggest part,” `cause that’s the coolest thing to me.”

 

Over his last five games, the junior is 114-for-166 passing for 1,668 yards. He has thrown 20 touchdowns and just three interceptions.

UConn: The Huskies were coming off back-to-back wins over Temple and Tulsa, but have not won win three in a row since 2015. UConn has now given up more than 350 yards passing to six of its eight opponents.

STREAKING

This is the first winning streak for the Tigers since beating Southeast Missouri ad Arkansas State to start the 2015 season. The win at Arkansas State also was the team’s last road win.

UP NEXT

Missouri: The Tigers return home to resume SEC play by hosting Florida next Saturday.

UConn: The Huskies begin the toughest stretch of their schedule by hosting No. 17 South Florida next week in a game rescheduled from September because of Hurricane Irma. The Bulls are coming off their first loss of the season. The Huskies then travel to the sunshine state to face No. 18 UCF.

— Associated Press —

K-State holds off Kansas 30-20

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Bill Snyder learned to appreciate special teams about six decades ago, when the 78-year-old Kansas State coach was a small-college wingback who wasn’t good enough to play anywhere else.

The emphasis that he places on them showed Saturday.

The Wildcats got a 99-yard kickoff return for a touchdown from D.J. Reed, and made several other crucial plays in the punt and kick return game, setting them up for a 30-20 victory over upset-minded Kansas that great improves their chances of playing in a bowl game.

“It was the difference in the ballgame,” Snyder said.

Alex Barnes added 128 yards and two touchdowns rushing for the Wildcats (4-4, 2/3 Big 12), who snapped a two-game skid with their ninth consecutive win over their biggest rival.

The Jayhawks (1-7, 0-5) got within a touchdown when Carter Stanley hit Steven Sims with a 60-yard touchdown pass with 6:51 to go. But after the teams swapped possessions, the Wildcats’ Matt McCrane hit his third field goal from 41 yards out with 1:21 remaining to put the game away.

Alex Delton, starting for the injured Jesse Ertz, threw for 98 yards and ran for 36 yards before leaving late in the first half with an injury of his own. Third-string quarterback Skylar Thompson played the rest of the way, going 4 of 6 for 40 yards and running 10 times for 39 yards.

“It’s the next-man-up mentality. I’ve approached every game this year like I was the starter,” the redshirt freshman said. “I was comfortable. I was confident. But we didn’t play our best game.”

Especially on defense.

Stanley finished with 418 yards passing, the third time in four games an opposing quarterback has thrown for at least 380. Sims hauled in nine catches for 233 yards.

The Jayhawks only managed 21 yards total offense their last time out against TCU, and hadn’t scored in nine quarters heading into the game. But they had 137 yards the first 15 minutes — more than in their last two games combined — and led 3-0 after Gabriel Rui’s early field goal.

But the Jayhawks’ momentum only lasted as long as it took Reed to run the ensuing kickoff 99 yards for a touchdown. The return highlighted the potent ability of the Wildcats’ special teams and a glaring weakness of the Jayhawks, who have surrendered three return TDs this season.

“If you saw that football game, I think you would have a hard time not realizing where our breakdown was,” Kansas coach David Beaty said. “We had several of them on the offensive and defensive sides of the ball too. It never lands in one area.”

McCrane added the first of his field goals to make it 10-6 at halftime, and the Wildcats needed just over a minute to turn a fumble by Stanley on the first play of the second half into another TD.

The Jayhawks tried to make it a game by marching 97 yards early in the fourth quarter. And when Taylor Martin scored from five yards out, they not only had their first touchdown in 12-plus quarters but also cut the Wildcats’ lead to 20-13 with 13:26 left in the game.

Kansas State’s defense forced a punt in the shadows of the Jayhawks’ own goal post, though, giving the Wildcats excellent field position. Barnes carried three straight times, and his nine-yard scamper on first-and-goal with 7:36 remaining gave them a cushion that would come in handy.

“Obviously wish we would’ve came out on top,” Stanley said, “but it was nice to see some offensive production. I’m proud of these guys for how hard they worked all week.”

THE TAKEAWAY

Kansas State: The Wildcats continue to own the Sunflower State, winning five straight in Lawrence and 22 of 27 against Kansas overall. But the chasm separating the programs has narrowed to a crack, and that appears to have as much to do with Kansas State backpedalling as the Jayhawks progressing.

Kansas: The Jayhawks at least made the game competitive, but another loss for Beaty will only turn up the heat on him. It should also turn up pressure on athletic director Sheahon Zenger — a banner flying overhead before the game called for his ouster. “That’s asinine,” Beaty said. “That’s crazy. I don’t have any other words for it. He’s our leader and we believe in him. We always have.”

STATS AND STREAKS

Snyder has 22 wins over Kansas, the most by any active coach over any opponent. … Kansas State has returned a kickoff for a TD in a nation-leading 13 straight seasons. … Sims’ 233 yards were the third-most in school history. … Stanley’s 418 yards was fifth-most in school history.

UP NEXT

Kansas State wraps up back-to-back road games Saturday at Texas Tech.

Kansas plays host to Baylor on Saturday in a battle for the Big 12 cellar.

— Associated Press —

Lee leads late rally to send Nebraska past Purdue 25-24

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) — Tanner Lee threw a 13-yard touchdown pass to Stanley Morgan Jr. with 14 seconds left Saturday night to rally Nebraska for a season-saving 25-24 victory at Purdue.

Lee capped the best night of his career with two TD passes in the final 11 1/2 minutes to erase a 12-point deficit.

“We didn’t play perfectly at all, but the kids never blinked,” Cornhuskers coach Mike Riley said. “Neither did the coaches, they kept at it.”

Nebraska snapped a two-game losing streak just barely.

But it was way better than the alternative.

With the Cornhuskers (4-4, 3-2 Big Ten) on the verge of their first three-game skid since 2008, they took over with 1:22 left, no timeouts and 70 yards from the end zone.

But Lee masterfully marched the Cornhuskers down field by taking advantage of the sideline and clock stoppages on first down plays, leaving just enough time to pull off the win.

Purdue (3-5, 1-4) only had time for a couple of plays and the game ended when Anthony Mahoungou stepped out of bounds near midfield as time expired.

The Boilermakers have lost three straight.

“Offensively, you can’t drop that many balls for big plays, you’re not going to win,” Purdue coach Jeff Brohm said. “Defensively, I thought we played hard, we tried to ride them down at the end and they wore down. They fought and battled hard but we came up short.”

Lee wound up 32 of 50 for 431 yards — all career bests. Morgan caught six passes for 112 yards on a night the Cornhuskers rushed for only 40 yards.

The problem: Lee’s late pass was the only Nebraska touchdown on six trips inside the red zone.

Purdue rushed for 199 yards as its struggling offense finally broke out of its funk. But quarterback David Blough couldn’t get the first down to close it out after Nebraska failed to convert on fourth-and-6 from the Purdue 15.

And the Boilermakers’ defense couldn’t come up with one last stop in the closing seconds.

THE TAKEAWAY

Nebraska: It wasn’t easy and it sure didn’t go according to plan. But the Cornhuskers survived — and ultimately that’s all that really matters. Nebraska has moved within two victories of becoming bowl eligible.

Purdue: After an impressive start, the Boilermakers’ bowl hopes have taken a major hit. They need to win three of the last four. And while remaining schedule is manageable (home against Illinois, at Northwestern, at Iowa and home against Indiana), Saturday’s loss means there is no margin for error.

UP NEXT

Nebraska: Hosts Northwestern on Nov. 4, a team it has beaten five times in the last six games.

Purdue: Will try to snap its losing streak when Illinois visits Ross-Ade Stadium on Nov. 4.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western soccer shuts out Northwest Friday 2-0

MARYVILLE, Mo. – A 2-0 win for the Missouri Western soccer team (15-2, 9-1) at Northwest Missouri Friday afternoon gave the Griffons a chance at a share of their first-ever MIAA regular season championship.

Anika Nobs’ first career goal in the 38th minute gave Missouri Western a 1-0 lead at Northwest. Sarah Blakley made it a 2-0 lead a little more than a minute later when she knocked in a free kick from 10 yards out. The Griffons out-shout Northwest Missouri 19-9 with nine shots on goal to Northwest’s three.

Missouri Western won its fifth-straight game, all in shutout fashion. It was the Griffons’ 12th time shutting out an opponent this season.

CHAMPIONSHIP SUNDAY
Missouri Western’s win set up a conference championship game for the Griffons this Sunday, Oct. 29. The Griffons remain one game behind MIAA-leading Central Missouri and host the Jennies Sunday at noon. Central Missouri is undefeated and leads MWSU by one game in the standings, so Western will have a chance to share share of the conference championship with a win. Sunday’s game begins at noon and will be broadcast on the radio at ESPN 1550 and you can click here to listen.

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest Missouri State drops exhibition game at Duke 93-60

– The Northwest Missouri State University men’s basketball team fell to Duke University, 93-60, on Friday evening at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C.
– The game was played as exhibition contest for both teams.
– The Bearcats trailed, 56-30, at the break.
– Starting in 2009, Duke University has invited the Division II national champion for an annual exhibition game.

Key Northwest Statistics
– The Bearcats hit 12 three pointers and limited Duke to just 8-of-24 (33.3 percent) from beyond the arc.
– Northwest grabbed nine offensive rebounds and forced the Blue Devils into 15 turnovers.
– Duke had just three steals and were 5-of-9 from the charity stripe.
– The Bearcat bench outscored the Blue Devil bench, 25-21.
– Ryan Hawkins scored a team-high 14 points with three rebounds, an assist and a steal. He was 5-of-7 from the field and 4-of-6 from beyond the arc.
– Joey Witthus scored 12 points, hitting four three-pointers.
– Chris-Ebou Ndow had 10 points with a pair of rebounds and a steal.
– Justin Pitts had seven points with four assists, three steals and a rebound.
– Brett Dougherty grabbed a team high six rebounds to go along with three assists and a steal.

Key Northwest Sequence
– Ndow gave Northwest its only lead of the game early in the game. Duke scored the first point of the contest on a free throw by Marvin Bagley III. The Bearcat defense then stopped the Blue Devils by forcing a pair of turnovers. On Northwest’s third possession, Witthus missed a three but Brett Dougherty grabbed an offensive rebound and found Ndow for a three pointer, making it a 3-1 Bearcat lead.

– With Northwest trailing 14-5, Witthus nailed a three off an assist from Ryan Welty to make it a six point game. On the next sequence, Pitts came up with a steal on Grayson Allen. Welty grabbed an offensive rebound and drew a foul. He hit both free throws to pull the Bearcats within four, 14-10.

Up Next
– The Bearcats begin the season on Friday, Nov. 10, against Upper Iowa at 1 p.m. in St. Joseph, Mo. Northwest’s first action will be on Friday, Nov. 17, against Metro State at 7 p.m.

— Northwest Athletics —

MWSU volleyball defeats Lindenwood for sixth straight win

ST. JOSEPH – Griffon volleyball (17-9) extended their winning streak to six matches with a 3-1 victory over Lindenwood (15-12) in the MWSU Fieldhouse. Missouri Western clinched its spot in the MIAA postseason tournament and is currently tied with #13 Central Oklahoma for second in the MIAA standings.

ACE OF CHOICE
The service line was Missouri Western’s weapon of attack in the match. MWSU recorded nine service aces in the four set victory, which tied for the most this season. Kayla Ruff led the way with her season best three aces. Amanda Dalbey added two aces and Shellby Taylor recorded her first ace of the season.

NAIL-BITTER
The second set provided free volleyball for the fans in the stands as MWSU fought off two set points to win the set. Facing a potential 2-0 match deficit, Missouri Western fought off the first set point with a Rachel Losch kill to even the score 24-24. Shellby Taylor gave life to the Griffons when they needed it most, down to the second set point 25-24. Taylor smashed a kill to tie the match at 25-25 then served an ace for the next point. The teams traded points to 27-27 before Lauren Murphy and Stephanie Doak both landed kills for the 29-27 set win that evened the match a 1-1

FLIPPING THE SCRIPT
After fighting back to win the second set, MWSU dominated the final two sets. The Griffons hit .333 with only five errors in the last two sets compared to a .170 hitting percentage with 10 errors in the first two sets. Defensively, Missouri Western limited Lindenwood to hit .189 in the third set and .086 in the fourth set.

UP NEXT
The Griffons host #16 Central Missouri on Saturday, Oct. 28 at 7 p.m. in the MWSU Fieldhouse. The match could have a sufficient impact on seeding for the MIAA postseason tournament. With a win, MWSU would move two matches ahead of UCM in the standings with just four matches remaining.

— MWSU Athletics —

Bearcat volleyball upsets No. 16 Central Missouri

– The Northwest Missouri State University volleyball team defeated Central Missouri, 3-1, on Friday at Bearcat Arena in Maryville, Mo.
– Northwest improves to 14-11 on the year and 8-5 in MIAA play. The No. 16 ranked Jennies fall to 20-6 overall and 10-3 in conference action.
– Maddy Bruder had a match-high 21 kills, hitting .327 for the match. She added 13 digs, two blocks and a two assists in the victory.

Key Northwest Statistics
– The Bearcats took the first set, 25-21, but dropped the second, 25-19. Northwest took the lead in the third set with a 25-19 win and closed out the match with a 25-21 set four victory.
– Northwest hit .270 for the match, hitting .375 in the first set.
– The Bearcats had eight service aces and nine blocks.
– Hallie Sidney hit .500 with 15 kills and no attacking errors. The freshman added four digs and a block.
– Olivia Nowakowski added 26 digs with a six assists and a pair of service aces.
– Sofia Schleppenbach had six block assists and a solo block. She added four digs, three kills and had a pair of service aces.
– Maddy Ahrens had 24 assists with six digs and three service aces.
– Sarah Dannettell had 21 assists with six digs, five kills and three blocks.
– Katelyn McKinnis had six digs defensively and added a service ace.

Key Northwest Sequence
– Tied, 19-19, in the first set, Northwest rallied to score six of the next eight points to take an early 1-0 set lead. Bruder had back-to-back kills to give the Bearcats a 21-19 lead. A service error pulled the Jennies back to within one, 21-20, but Schleppenbach came up with a kill and UCM missed on an attack, making it a 23-20 Northwest advantage, forcing a timeout. UCM would get another kill to make it 23-21, but a service error gave the Bearcats set point and Sidney put away a kill to give Northwest the set.

– UCM pushed hard for a fifth set, taking a 20-19 lead late in the fourth off a kill form Audrey Fisher. But Northwest responded by tying the match with a kill from Morgan Lewis. The Jennies came up with another kill to take a 21-20 lead but that would be the last point UCM would score in the match. Bruder put away a kill and Nowakowski added a service ace to make it 22-21 Northwest. After a Jennie timeout, Bruder recorded back-to-back kills to give the Bearcats match point, forcing UCM’s second timeout. The Jennies hit into a block from Bruder and Schleppenbach to end the match.

Up Next
– Northwest will host Lindenwood on Saturday at 3 p.m. in Bearcat Arena.

— Northwest Athletics —

Missouri Western soccer moves up to No. 3 in Central Regional rankings

The Missouri Western women’s soccer team moved up three spots to No. 3 in the latest NCAA Division II Central Regional rankings.

The Griffons, who are 14-2 this season and 8-1 in the MIAA, are behind Central Missouri and Bemidji State in the regional rankings. Minnesota State is No. 4, followed by Northeastern State and Augustana.

The top six teams in the regional rankings will qualify for the NCAA Tournament as there are two weeks left before the selection show. This is the highest regional ranking in MWSU school history as they’ve never qualified for the NCAA Tournament.

Missouri Western will try and add to its resume this weekend as they play at Northwest Missouri State Friday at 3:00 p.m. Then the Griffons close out the regular season Sunday at home against No. 1 Central Missouri at Noon.

Griffon volleyball rallies to win at Northwest Missouri State in five sets

MARYVILLE, Mo. – The Missouri Western volleyball team rallied to defeat Northwest Missouri State in five set Tuesday 25-22, 18-25, 17-25, 25-16, 15-5.

The Griffons have won five straight matches and nine of their last ten. MWSU is now 16-9 and 10-2 in the MIAA, while the Bearcats falls to 13-11 and 7-5 in league play.

RALLY WHEN IT MATTERED
Tied 7-7 in the fourth set, an Ali Tauchen kill ignited a 7-2 rally to take a 14-9 lead in the set and Missouri Western never looked back. MWSU closed out the fourth set on a 5-0 rally to win 25-15. The momentum carried over to the fifth set as the Griffons dominated and ended the match with 12-2 run to win the set 15-5.

LIVING ON THE EDGE
In its five match win streak, Missouri Western has been pushed to five sets in the three of the matches. Prior to that stretch, MWSU did not have a match go more than four sets.

ONE-SIDED RIVALRY
The Griffons swept the season series for the fifth time in the last six seasons and have won three straight matches against the Bearcats. MWSU has also won the last five meetings at Bearcat Arena in Maryville, Missouri. After 94 meetings between the two teams, Missouri Western leads the all-time series 70-24.

UP NEXT
The Griffons return to the MWSU Fieldhouse on Friday, Oct. 27 at 7 p.m. against Lindenwood.

— MWSU Athletics —

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