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MIAA hands out weekly football awards

Kansas City, Mo. (October 23, 2017) – Central Missouri’s Brook Bolles has been named the MIAA Football Offensive Athlete of the Week. Pittsburg State’s Morgan Selemaea has been named the MIAA Football Defensive Athlete of the Week along with teammate Jared Vincent who was named the MIAA Football Special Teams Athlete of the Week.

MIAA Football Offensive Athlete of the Week
Brook Bolles, QB, University of Central Missouri

Bolles, a junior from Lincoln, Neb., had his best game as a Mule accounting for 483 yards of offense and six touchdowns at Washburn. Bolles did it both through the air and on the ground. For the fifth straight game he threw for more than 300 yards, finishing just two yards shy of his career high with 356. He also tied a career-high with four touchdown passes and did not throw an interception. Bolles had a career-day on the ground running for a career-high 117 yards and scored two more touchdowns.

MIAA Football Defensive Athlete of the Week
Morgan Selemaea, S, Pittsburg State

Selemaea, a freshman from Harrisonville, Mo., made a team-leading nine tackles (eight solo) to help Pittsburg State to a 27-10 road win over Emporia State – a game that was halted due to inclement weather Saturday and completed Sunday afternoon (Oct. 22). The Harrisonville, Mo., native also registered a quarterback sack, recovered a fumble and recorded an interception in the Gorillas win over the Hornets. The Pitt State defense compiled three takeaways (two fumble recoveries & one interception) and successfully held the ESU defense on downs five times in the contest.

MIAA Football Special Teams Athlete of the Week
Jared Vincent, P/PK, Pittsburg State University

Vincent, a sophomore from Claremore, Okla., booted a pair of field goals and converted all three of his PAT tries in the Gorillas road win over the Hornets. Vincent converted a 31-yard field goal with 7:27 remaining in the game to give Pitt State a three-possession lead over ESU on the fourth play after the game was resumed Sunday following an overnight weather delay. Vincent also connected on a 29-yard field goal in the third quarter Saturday. For the season, he has made 12 of 14 field goal attempts.

— MIAA Press Release —

Tigers’ Okwuegbunam named SEC Co-Freshman of the Week

COLUMBIA, Mo. – Mizzou Football RS freshman TE Albert Okwuegbunam (Springfield, Ill.) was named SEC Co-Freshman of the Week, announced Monday by the league office. Okwuegbunam (pronounced Oh-coo-way-boo-nahm) caught four passes for 57 yards, including three TD grabs, tying the school record for touchdowns in a single game by a Mizzou TE. The three TD grabs tie him with former Mackey Award winner Chase Coffman, who had three against Colorado in 2007, and Swayne Blakley, who had three against Western Michigan in 1999.

At 6-5, 260 pounds, Okwuegbunam is emerging as the Tigers’ top red zone threat as all three of his scores Saturday came from inside the 20 yard line (scores of 19, 18 and 10). All three grabs came in the first quarter as Mizzou raced to a 34-7 lead, its most points ever in a single quarter of action.

Okwuegbunam has been part of a TE renaissance at Mizzou under the direction of second-year OC Josh Heupel. The group has combined to haul in 20 catches for 403 yards and are on pace for the most yards by a Mizzou TE group since 2010. The group also has eight TD grabs, highlighted by Okwuegbunam’s team-high five, the most by a Mizzou TE group since 2008.

Mizzou will be back in action Saturday as it heads to UConn for its final nonconference game of the season. The game will air on ESPN 1550 at 5:30 p.m.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Missouri Western soccer shuts out Emporia State to secure home MIAA Tournament game

EMPORIA, Kan. – The Missouri Western soccer team clinched the program’s first-ever home postseason game with a 3-0 win at Emporia State Sunday afternoon. The Griffons improve to 14-2 this season and 8-1 in the MIAA.

MWSU’s 11th shutout of the season guaranteed the team will play its first round MIAA Tournament game on Craig Field at Spratt Memorial Stadium, Wednesday, Nov. 1.

With two more regular season games remaining, the Griffons are all alone in second place in the MIAA standings, just one game and three points behind Central Missouri.

SPREADING THE LOVE
Three different Griffons scored goals in Sunday’s game, including the first goal of the season for Ashlyn Powers. Bridget Blessie scored her fifth goal of the season and her third in the last four games in the 25th minute on a penalty kick. Powers got her first goal since her freshman season in 2014 on a shot from 25 yards out in the 48th minute off Sydney Cluck’s MIAA-leading eighth assist of the season. Cassidy Menke just squeaked in her 14th goal of the season with 10 seconds remaining in the game. Even with Menke’s MIAA-leading goal total, MWSU has received scores from 11 different Griffons this year, seven different Griffs have scored multiple goals.

RESERVE KEEPERS STEP UP
Reigning MIAA Goalkeeper of the Week Sarah Lyle was away from the team for personal matters this weekend and the team didn’t skip a beat. Lexie Martin and Ally Barb combined for the Sunday shutout after Martin blanked Washburn on Friday. Martin was credited with all three Missouri Western saves, Sunday. The Griffons out-shot the Hornets 18-6 and 8-3 on goal.

ROAD WARRIORS
After Sunday, the Griffons are 5-0 in MIAA road games this season and have not allowed a goal away from home in conference play. Overall, the team is 8-1 on the road with the only loss coming in a non-conference game at Central Missouri. On the season, MWSU has outscored opponents 17-4 in road games and 10-0 in MIAA road games.

UP NEXT
The final two regular season games of 2017 come next week. It begins Friday at Northwest Missouri State (6-8, 3-5). Senior Day comes on Sunday, Oct. 29, as the Griffons host current No. 1-ranked Central Missouri (15-0, 8-0).

— MWSU Athletics —

KU edges Mizzou as Showdown for Relief raises $1.75 million

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Mizzou Men’s Basketball and Kansas traveled to the Sprint Center on Saturday for the Showdown for Relief charity exhibition game, where the two schools proceeded to raise $1.75 million for hurricane relief. On the court, Kansas outlasted the Tigers, 93-87, in a thrilling game which featured 14 lead changes.

TOP TIGERS

– Freshman forward Michael Porter, Jr. (Columbia, Mo.) led the Tigers, scoring 21 points (6-of-20 FG, 2-of-9 3PT, 7-of-8 FT), while grabbing eight rebounds and dishing out two assists. Porter, Jr. played 23 minutes in the game and recorded two blocks and one steal.

– Barnett contributed 19 points (7-of-10 FG, 5-of-7 3PT) in the game while grabbing three rebounds in 31 minutes, the second-most of any Mizzou player in the game. Barnett was solid near the end of the game, as he scored seven points in the final six minutes of the game to cut Kansas’ lead back down to single digits.

– Freshman forward Jeremiah Tilmon (East St. Louis, Ill.) threw down two thunderous putback dunks in the second half that energized the Sprint Center crowd and kept the game close. Tilmon finished the game with 10 points (5-of-5 FG, 0-of-3 FT) and grabbed four rebounds while also turning away one Kansas shot with a block.

– Freshman forward Jontay Porter (Columbia, Mo.) was a force on the glass for the entire game, snagging 12 rebounds. Porter scored nine points (4-of-12 FG, 1-of-5 3PT) in the game and grabbed three steals.

– Graduate transfer guard Kassius Robertson (Toronto, Ontario) registered the most minutes played for Mizzou (33). The super senior was efficient during his time on the floor, scoring 13 points (5-of-9, 3-of-5 3PT) while guarding Kansas’ ball handler for a majority of the contest.

NOTES

– The Showdown for Relief generated more than $1.75 Million for natural disaster relief.

– The three ball was working for Mizzou, as the Tigers hit 14 of their 32 attempts (44%) from downtown.

– Mizzou pounded the offensive glass, out-rebounding the Jayhawks, 19-10, in that category. This resulted in 26 second-chance points.

– The game was competitive throughout, featuring 14 lead changes.

– The Black & Gold also moved the ball well, tallying 20 total assists to Kansas’ 16.

UP NEXT

Mizzou will officially begin its season on Friday, Nov. 10, when the Tigers host old Big 12 Conference foe, Iowa State, at Mizzou Arena. Tipoff time for the contest is scheduled for 8 p.m. CT and will be broadcast on the SEC Network.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Griffons get blown out by No. 8 Fort Hays State 38-10

ST. JOSEPH – For the second straight week the Griffon football offense struggled to find a rhythm and the team suffered its second-straight loss, 38-10 to No. 8-ranked Fort Hays State (8-0).

Missouri Western (4-4) trailed just 14-10 with 52 seconds remaining in the second quarter, but a six-play, 72-yard Fort Hays State drive at the end of the second quarter started a string of 24 unanswered Fort Hays State points.

The Griffons were held to 188 total yards of offense while allowing 450. Most of Fort Hays State’s offense came on big plays. The Tigers had a pass play of 67 yards and rushes of 43, 34 and 31 yards. The Griffon defense forced seven Fort Hays State punts, but two lost fumbles and an interception gave the Tigers extra opportunities. The defense also picked up 13 tackles for loss and four sacks on the day.

QUARTERBACK CAROUSEL
Skyler Windmiller returned at quarterback for the Griffons, who have now started three different quarterbacks in the last three games. Dom Marino still had not been cleared to play for Saturday’s game and Corey Bertini was still in concussion protocol. Windmiller hadn’t played since suffering an injury in the fourth quarter of the season opener at Nebraska Kearney. The senior completed 13-of-29 passes for 132 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions. He was sacked four times.

RUNNING GAME HELD IN CHECK
After leading the MIAA in rushing through the first six weeks of the season, the Griffons have been held under 100 yards in the last two games. Fort Hays State held the Griffons to just 56 net rushing yards. Joshua Caldwell carried the ball 13 times for 72 yards himself. Shamar Griffith added 16 rushing yards and Derek Gray Jr. had 13. The team total was negated by four sacks.

UP NEXT
Homecoming at Missouri Western is next Saturday, Oct. 27 when the Griffons host Washburn (5-3) for a 2 p.m. kickoff.

— MWSU Athletics —

No. 1 Bearcats blank Lindenwood 19-0

The Northwest Missouri State University football team defeated Lindenwood University, 19-0, on Saturday at Bearcat Stadium in Maryville, Mo.

– Northwest moves to 8-0 on the year while the Lions fall to 2-6 overall.

– It was the Bearcats’ fourth shutout victory on the season.

– Wide receiver Shane Williams was named the Homecoming Don Black Award winner, finishing with nine receptions for 134 yards.

Key Northwest Defensive Statistics
– Northwest held the Lions to just 27 rushing yards on the day and 176 total yards.

– Neither team recorded a turnover but the Bearcats did record points on defense, stuffing a Lindenwood run for a safety in the second quarter.

– The Lions were just 4-of-13 on third downs and were 0-for-2 on fourth down attempts.

– The Bearcats recorded four sacks on the day and allowed just two rushing first downs on the afternoon.

– Ben Althoff had a team-high 10 tackles on the day with one tackle for loss.

– Bobby Gruenloh had a pair of tackles behind the line with a sack. He finished the day with six tackles.

– Jarrod Bishop had five tackles with a sack, two quarterback hurries and 1.5 tackles for loss.

– Marcus Jones broke up a pair of passes and had five tackles, one coming behind the line of scrimmage.

– Late in the first half, Northwest’s drive stalled and Matt Thorman was brought on to punt. Thorman hit a high kick into the south wind and long snapper Andy Hessler downed the ball at the Lindenwood one-yard line. On the Lions’ first play, the defensive line got a great push and Gruenloh and Ben Spaeth combined for the safety, making it 16-0 Bearcats.

Key Northwest Offensive Statistics
– The Bearcats recorded 22 first downs, 14 coming through the air.

– Northwest finished with 403 yards of total offense and held a 32:06-to-27:54 advantage in time of possession.

– Zach Martin finished 24-of-39 with 271 yards through the air.

– Jordan Thompson finished the day with 72 yards on the ground while Brody McMahon added 63 on 16 carries. Each had a rushing touchdown on the afternoon.

– Shawn Bane Jr. caught five passes for 44 yards and Jordan Grove racked up 30 yards on five catches.

– Brody McMahon had two receptions for 40 yards and Quincy Woods had two catches for 14 yards. Alec Tatum had one catch for nine yards.

Northwest Scoring Drives
– Northwest’s first drive of the game was capped by a one yard McMahon touchdown run. The score was setup by a 38 yard pass completion from Martin to McMahon.

– The Bearcats drove 90 yards in 13 plays for the second touchdown of the day. Jordan Thompson ran from two yards out to make it 14-0 Northwest midway though the second quarter.

– After Thorman’s second quarter punt was downed at the one, Northwest recorded a safety to make it 16-0 with 0:44 seconds left in the first half.

– The Bearcats took the free kick after the safety and promptly marched 34 yards down the field to score before the end of the half. Williams caught a 22 yard pass from Martin on a second down conversion. A few plays later, Brett Garner hit a 24-yard field goal as the first half clock expired to give Northwest a 19-0 advantage at the break.

Up Next
– The Bearcats hit the road for a 2 p.m. MIAA contest at Pittsburg State University in Pittsburg, Kan.

— Northwest Athletics —

Missouri snaps five-game skid with blowout win over Idaho

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — In a team meeting Monday, Missouri coach Barry Odom set ablaze scouting reports, game plans and other remnants of a disappointing first half of the season. Five days later, the Tigers started the second half of the season by torching Idaho’s secondary.

Missouri ended a five-game losing streak with a 68-21 victory on Faurot Field.

“I think the display in the team meeting room Monday was perfect,” quarterback Drew Lock said. “I think we’re all buying into the whole second season. Starting off 1-0 is what we needed. I think we can keep building on that. We’ve got a lot of winnable games coming up, and we just need to believe in it.”

Lock completed 23 of 33 passes for 467 yards and six touchdowns. He fell one touchdown pass short of the school record he set in the season opener. J’Mon Moore caught 11 passes for 174 yards and a touchdown.

The game began ominously for the Tigers (2-5). Armond Hawkins intercepted Lock on the first play, and the Vandals (2-5) proceeded to score on a 7-yard pass from Matt Linehan to Kaden Elliss, a linebacker who moonlights on offense.

“There was a very pointed discussion between our offensive coordinator and him,” Odom said, referring to Josh Heupel and Lock. “It would not be G-rated.”

Lock, in his third year starting for a team that hasn’t posted a winning record since 2014, said he has developed thick skin.

“I’ve handled a lot of adversity since I’ve been here, so throwing a pick on the first play, I’ve been in a lot worse situations here,” Lock said.

Missouri responded with five first-quarter touchdowns, including three TD passes from Lock to tight end Albert Okwuegbunam. By halftime, Missouri led 51-14 and had accumulated 465 yards.

Idaho entered the game ranked sixth nationally in pass defense, but it hadn’t played a Power 5 conference opponent until Saturday. The Tigers rely on run-pass option plays, and Lock chose the pass option frequently in the first half. The Vandals gave Missouri receivers big cushions — seemingly conceding short passes to prevent big plays — but Lock still connected on a 45-yard pass to Emanuel Hall and a 50-yarder Johnathan Johnson in the first quarter. Idaho was repeatedly gashed down the middle of the field by Missouri’s tight ends, including Kendall Blanton’s 62-yard reception.

Missouri was missing leading rusher Damarea Crockett, who injured his shoulder last week against Georgia and is expected to be out “for a while,” Odom said. In his place, freshman Larry Rountree rushed 12 times for 97 yards, including a 53-yard rush in which he plowed over Idaho defensive back Dorian Clark.

“I was just hitting the first person I saw in front of me,” Rountree said. “I’m not trying to be soft. I’m not afraid of contact.”

Missouri’s offensive output wasn’t entirely unexpected. The Tigers scored 72 points in their season-opening win over Missouri State and compiled a combined 62 points in losses at Kentucky and Georgia the last two weeks.

Missouri has been plagued by poor special teams, but the kicking game was a strength against Idaho. Richaud Floyd scored on an 85-yard punt return, and another TD was set up when Ronnell Perkins recovered a muffed kickoff in the first quarter.

Missouri entered Saturday ranked 122nd nationally in total defense after giving up an average of 499 yards per game. Idaho managed just 278 yards. Linehan completed 19 of 32 passes for 139 yards and two touchdowns. Alfonso Onunwor caught eight passes for 89 yards, and Aaron Duckworth carried 13 times for 74 yards. Backup quarterback Mason Petrino got some playing time late in the game and threw a 10-yard touchdown pass to David Ungerer with 48 seconds left.

“They just played way better than we did,” Idaho coach Paul Petrino said. “Offensively, they got after us. Defensively, they won one-on-one matchups. You’ve just got to give them credit.”

THE TAKEAWAY

A NOD TO THE PAST: It was homecoming at Missouri, and the Tigers honored their past by wearing throwback helmets with block M logos on the side, rather than the modern Tiger head logos. Also, Missouri opened the game lined up in the Split-T formation — invented by former coach Don Faurot in 1941 — before shifting into a spread formation.

MISSING KICKER: Missouri played without kicker Tucker McCann, but it didn’t miss him. McCann was suspended for a violation of team rules, and in his place, Nick Bartolotta made two field goals and converted 8 of 9 extra-point attempts. The 5-foot-6 Bartolotta also made a solo tackle on a kickoff. Odom said McCann will return to his starting role this week.

THE RETURN OF D-LINE ZOU: In the last decade, Missouri was so prolific at cranking out NFL defensive linemen that it adopted the nickname “D-Line Zou.” That line had been quiet in 2017 until it faced Idaho. The Tigers finished with five sacks. Defensive tackle Terry Beckner, a preseason All-SEC pick, had only two sacks in the first six games. He was far more active against the Vandals, posting two sacks and six tackles.

GOING BOTH WAYS: Ellis was one of the few bright spots for Vandals. In addition to his touchdown catch, he had three tackles for loss, including a sack.

UP NEXT

MISSOURI: The Tigers will try to put together their first winning streak of the season when they visit Connecticut.

IDAHO: The Vandals will meet Louisiana-Monroe at home.

— Associated Press —

MWSU volleyball extends winning streak with four set win against Washburn

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. – Griffon volleyball (15-9) pushed its winning streak to four matches with a 3-1 victory over Washburn (14-9). MWSU has now won eight of the last nine matches and is tied for second place in the MIAA standings.

KNOCKING THEM OFF
Missouri Western knocked off Washburn for the first time since Oct. 18, 2014. MWSU extends its series lead to 47-40 over WU.

SHARING THE WEALTH
For back-to-back games, the Griffons had four attackers finish with double digits kills. Stephanie Doak led the way with 17 kills and hit .311 for the match. Shellby Taylor added 13 kills and Mikayla Sellers-Wiebe recorded 10 kills. Rachel Losch had a match-high .364 hitting percentage as she ended with 12 kills.

CRUNCH TIME
Kayla Ruff has provided big defensive plays throughout her career against the Ichabods. She finished the match against Washburn with 29 digs, the third most for a four set match. Ruff set program records for digs in a three set match in 2016 and four set match in 2015 against Washburn.

UP NEXT
Missouri Western travels to Maryville, Missouri on Tuesday, Oct. 24. First serve against the rival Bearcats is scheduled for 7 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

Kansas State’s upset bid of No. 9 Oklahoma comes up short

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Oklahoma has made a habit of squandering early leads much of this season.

The Sooners went the other way Saturday night.

Rodney Anderson ran 22 yards for the go-ahead score with 7 seconds left, Baker Mayfield threw for 410 yards and accounted for four touchdowns, and the nation’s ninth-ranked team overcame a 21-10 halftime deficit to beat Kansas State 42-35 and keep their playoff hopes alive.

Anderson finished with 147 yards rushing and also caught a TD pass for the Sooners (6-1, 3-1 Big 12), who shredded the overmatched defense of the Wildcats (3-4, 1-3) over the final 30 minutes.

“Our guys at halftime had a great look in their eye. They were determined to come out and play a lot better,” Sooners coach Lincoln Riley said. “But the mentality really went to another level there in the locker room at halftime. They were really ready to play.”

Kansas State sophomore Alex Delton’s first career touchdown pass with 2:25 left it tied at 35, but Mayfield and Anderson calmly went to work. The Heisman Trophy candidate hit a series of throws downfield before Anderson took a carry around the left side for the decisive score.

“As a leadership group, we took care of it and handled it,” Mayfield said. “That’s a huge win for us, considering we haven’t played well in the second half most of the season.”

Making his second career start, Delton finished with 161 yards rushing and three TDs while going 12 of 14 for 144 yards through the air. Alex Barnes added 108 yards and a touchdown on just six carries.

It was the Sooners’ nation-leading 14th consecutive true road victory, and it extended their run of dominance in Manhattan. They haven’t lost to the Wildcats in their home stadium since 1996.

“I’m tired of coming into the locker room under such circumstances,” said Kansas State coach Bill Snyder, whose team has lost three straight to the Sooners. “We’ve lost far too many games. You have to play complete games in this conference. One half won’t do it.”

It was Kansas State that was rolling early, though, with Barnes taking a handoff up the middle on the game’s second play for a 75-yard TD run. The Sooners needed a couple minutes for Mayfield to provide the answer, but his touchdown toss to tight end Mark Andrews was his highlight of the half.

Mayfield threw a pick in the end zone on the Sooners’ ensuing possession, just his second of the season. Then he was inexplicably split wide as Oklahoma went to the Wildcat set in short-yardage spots.

Kansas State stuffed Trey Sermon and Dimitri Flowers for no gain on consecutive plays to force one turnover on downs, then dumped Flowers for a loss at the goal line to force a field goal.

Delton’s two touchdown runs staked Kansas State to a 21-10 lead at the break.

“It was still important for us to play that last 30 minutes,” Snyder said.

Indeed, whatever momentum the Wildcats took into the locker room stayed there, because Mayfield and the Sooners got going in the second half. They tromped 80 yards for a touchdown on their first possession, 69 yards for a field goal on their second and 93 yards for another touchdown on their third.

The 2-point conversion gave them a 28-21 lead with 14:19 left, their first of the game.

It took a snap over punter Austin Seibert’s head midway through the fourth quarter for the Wildcats to draw even, which they did on Delton’s third TD run. But Mayfield’s 66-yard pitch-and-catch to Marquise Brown set up a go-ahead TD toss to Anderson with 5:16 to go.

Kansas State drove downfield to tie it at 35 on Delton’s first career TD pass, but it came with 2:25 still on the clock. And that was enough time for Oklahoma to score one more time.

“You’re trying to turn the tide and start the season over,” Kansas State defensive tackle Will Geary said. “When they score like that, it just takes away all your spirit.”

THE TAKEAWAY

Oklahoma showed off its deep stable of offensive weapons. Mayfield had with 69 yards rushing, Brown had six catches for 126 yards and tight end Mark Andrews had a team-high seven catches for 61 yards. That helped make up for freshman running back Trey Sermon, who had just four carries for 18 yards.

Kansas State made strides offensively from last week’s dismal showing against TCU, when it managed 216 yards total offense. The Wildcats had 202 in the first quarter alone. But it was the defense that let them down this time, keeping them from their first home win over a Top 10 opponent since 2006.

UP NEXT

Oklahoma returns home to play Texas Tech on Saturday night.

Kansas State heads down Interstate 70 to face Kansas on Saturday.

— Associated Press —

Kansas gets shutout at No. 4 TCU 43-0

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Kenny Hill matched his career high with five touchdown passes, KaVontae Turpin returned a punt 90 yards for a score after going backward to the 3 and the TCU defense dominated overmatched Kansas in the fourth-ranked Horned Frogs’ 43-0 victory Saturday night.

The Jayhawks (1-6, 0-4) had 21 yards total offense while tying an 81-year-old NCAA record with their 44th straight loss in a true road game.

With severe weather approaching, both coaches agreed to a running clock from the 12:49 mark of the fourth quarter with TCU leading by final margin.

John Diarse had a 67-yard catch-and-run touchdown for a 24-0 lead in the second quarter and finished with 130 yards on four receptions as the Horned Frogs (7-0, 4-0 Big 12) improved to 19-0 at home as a top 10 team under coach Gary Patterson.

TCU outgained Kansas 305-3 in the first half and was never challenged after winning the past three against the Jayhawks by a combined 11 points, including 24-23 last year when the Horned Frogs needed 10 fourth-quarter points to win on the road.

The Jayhawks have lost 47 straight away from home overall since a 34-7 win at UTEP on Sept. 12, 2009. Kansas’ Big 12 road losing streak is up to 37 games since a 35-33 win at Iowa State on Oct. 4, 2008.

Western State of Colorado set the record for consecutive true road losses from 1926 to 1936.

Jalen Reagor had touchdown catches of 22 and 15 yards from Hill, who sat the fourth quarter to finish 19 of 26 for 278 yards without an interception and now has 15 TDs with three picks this season. Taj Williams caught Hill’s final TD pass, a 26-yarder early in the third quarter.

Kansas’ visit marked the return of offensive coordinator Doug Meacham, who clearly doesn’t have the weapons he shared with Sonny Cumbie in that role the past three years at TCU.

Peyton Kinder was 7 of 16 for 38 yards and was sacked four times for 24 yards in losses. Deron Thompson was the leader rushing with 10 yards on five carries.

On his dazzling touchdown, Turpin caught the punt just inside the 10 and took a few steps forward before reversing field and running backward. He slipped out of a tackle as he turned at the 3, broke another one inside the 10 and outran everyone up the right side of the field for a 43-0 lead.

THE TAKEAWAY

Kansas: The Jayhawks had four first downs, two by penalty. The only first downs on plays that gained yards came on Kansas’ first and last series. The Jayhawks had minus-6 total yards after Steven Sims was dropped for a 6-yard loss on a reverse on the last play of the third quarter.

TCU: With no losses among the top 3 in the poll, the Horned Frogs figure to stay put with one more game before the first College Football Playoff rankings come out. But TCU did exactly what it needed, overwhelming an outmatched opponent from the start.

UP NEXT

Kansas: Home against Kansas State next Saturday, seeking first win over in-state rival since 2008.

TCU: At surging Iowa State next Saturday, with the Cyclones poised for the first AP Top 25 ranking since 2005.

— Associated Press —

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