We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Three Tigers earn All-SEC honors by Associated Press

COLUMBIA, Mo. – It is awards season in college football, and on the heels of an 8-4 regular season, several members of the 23rd-ranked Mizzou Football team are earning recognition for their outstanding play. The Associated Press has named three Tigers to its 2018 All-Southeastern Conference first and second teams, as released today.

Junior OL Tre’Vour Wallace-Simms (East St. Louis, Ill.) won first-team All-SEC honors by the organization for his outstanding play this season as he helped lead the way for one of the top-producing offenses in the league. Wallace-Simms has been a key part of the line that ranks ninth in the nation (second in the SEC) in fewest tackles for loss allowed (4.08 per game) and 11th nationally (second in the SEC) in fewest sacks allowed (1.08 per game). Mizzou will enter the 2018 AutoZone Liberty Bowl (Dec. 31st versus Oklahoma State) with the nation’s 17th-ranked offense (fourth-best in the SEC), averaging 468.8 yards per game.

Wallace-Simms becomes the second Tiger offensive lineman to win first-team All-SEC honors by the A.P., joining former standout Justin Britt (2013) in that category.

Senior QB Drew Lock (Lee’s Summit, Mo.) was named second-team All-SEC by the writers, after turning in an outstanding year that saw him throw for 3,125 yards and 25 touchdowns for the 8-4 Tigers. Lock, who is a national finalist for the Manning Award, the Unitas Golden Arm Award and the Lowe’s Senior CLASS Award, ranks among the top performers in the league in numerous categories, just a few of which include: passing yards (3rd in SEC/18th in NCAA), passing touchdowns (2nd/19th), and points responsible for (2nd/16th). Lock, who has also ran for a career-best six touchdowns in 2018, is the engineer of a Tiger offense that ranks 20th nationally (3rd in the SEC) averaging 36.9 points per game.

Senior DT Terry Beckner, Jr. (East St. Louis, Ill.) also earned second-team All-SEC honors for his stellar play in 2018. Beckner led Mizzou in the regular season with 9.5 tackles for loss and added a pair of quarterback sacks to go with five quarterback pressures and 31 total tackles for a Tiger defense which improved throughout the year. He’s been a key reason why Mizzou’s defense has been very stout against the run, as the Tigers enter the bowl game ranked 22nd nationally (4th in the SEC), allowing 122.9 yards per game on the ground.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Kansas sweeps Big 12 weekly basketball awards

IRVING, Texas – Kansas senior Lagerald Vick and redshirt junior Dedric Lawson came up big in the Jayhawks’ overtime win against Stanford on Dec. 1 and have been rewarded for their efforts. Vick has been named the Big 12 Player of the Week, while Lawson is the Big 12 Newcomer of the Week in a vote by a media panel which covers the conference, the league announced Monday.

In KU’s 90-84 overtime win against Stanford Dec. 1, Vick scored 19 of his 27 points in the final 7:30 of regulation and overtime. The Memphis guard made a 3-pointer with just under seven seconds remaining to send the game into the extra period. Vick then scored KU’s first eight points in OT. His seven 3-pointers marked the third time this season he has made seven or more treys.

Lawson tallied his third-straight and fourth double-double of the season with 24 points and 15 rebounds against the Cardinal. The Memphis forward was 10-for-11 from the free throw line and his 15 rebounds marked a season high. Lawson has now scored 24 or more points in three-straight games and 20-plus four times this season.

Through games of Dec. 2, Vick leads the Big 12 in scoring at 20.8 points per game. He also leads the league in 3-point field goal percentage at 59.6 and in 3-pointers made per game at 4.7. Lawson is the only player in the Big 12 averaging a double-double. He leads the conference in rebounds at 11.2 per game and his 18.8 scoring average is fifth in the league.

Kansas is 4-for-4 in Big 12 Player of the Week honors this season with Vick and Lawson each being named twice. This is the second time KU has swept the weekly honors in 2018-19 as Lawson was the player and freshman guard Quentin Grimes the Big 12 Newcomer of the Week on Nov. 12. Additionally, this is the second time in the 23-year history of the Big 12 that Kansas has swept the weekly honor twice in one season with the other in 2013-14.

No. 2 Kansas (6-0) hosts Wofford (6-2) in Allen Fieldhouse on Tuesday, Dec. 4, at 7 p.m. (Central). The game will be televised on Jayhawk TV and ESPN+.

2018-19 Big 12 Men’s Basketball Weekly Awards
Player of the Week
Nov. 12 – Dedric Lawson, Kansas, F, Jr.
Nov. 19 – Lagerald Vick, Kansas, G, Sr.
Nov. 26 – Dedric Lawson, Kansas, F, Jr.
Dec. 3 – Lagerald Vick, Kansas, G, Sr.

Newcomer of the Week
Nov. 12 – Quentin Grimes, Kansas, G, Fr.
Nov. 19 – Talen Horton-Tucker, Iowa State, G, Fr and Jaxson Hayes, Texas, F, Fr.
Nov. 26 – Jaxson Hayes, Texas, F, Fr.
Dec. 3 – Dedric Lawson, Kansas, F, Jr.

— KU Athletics —

Nebraska jumps into AP Top 25

Lincoln – On the heels of a 7-1 start, the Nebraska men’s basketball team is ranked 24th in the Associated Press poll released Monday. It marks the first time that the Huskers are nationally ranked by the AP since Nov. 17, 2014.

The Huskers, whose 7-1 start is the program’s best since the 2003-04 season, are one of seven Big Ten teams ranked this week. NU is joined by Michigan (5), Michigan State (10), Wisconsin (12), Iowa (18), Ohio State (19) and Maryland (23). In addition, Purdue and Indiana are also receiving votes in Monday’s poll. It marks the second straight week that seven Big Ten teams are ranked. Prior to last week, that had not happened since Feb. 9, 1999.

Nebraska is coming off a 2-0 week with a 68-66 win at Clemson, which is receiving votes in Monday’s poll and a 75-60 home win over Illinois. The Huskers are in action twice this week, traveling to Minnesota on Wednesday before hosting Creighton, which is also receiving votes this week, on Saturday.

— NU Athletics —

Mahomes throws 4 TDs as Chiefs hang on at Oakland 40-33

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs still had plenty of firepower on offense even without star running back Kareem Hunt.

Mahomes threw four touchdown passes Sunday to join Peyton Manning and Tom Brady as the only QBs to reach the 40 TD mark through 12 games, sending the Chiefs to a 40-33 victory over the Oakland Raiders in the first game since releasing Hunt.

“The mindset of this team is whenever you get your opportunity, you make the most of it,” Mahomes said. “I think every single game someone else steps up. We kept our mind on that and just playing football, a game we love.”

The Chiefs (10-2) cut ties with Hunt after a months-old video surfaced on TMZ on Friday, showing him shoving and kicking a woman. No charges have been filed in the case from February, but the Chiefs let Hunt go because he misled them about the incident .

Spencer Ware replaced Hunt as starter and scored on a direct snap on fourth-and-goal from the 1 in the third quarter.

“That’s my brother,” Ware said about Hunt. “It’s a tough situation. But like I said, the men in this circle, the men in our locker room, the organization, Chiefs kingdom — we got one goal to win the Super Bowl. We got to stay distraction free. I don’t have anything else to say about that.”

Mahomes did most of the rest of the damage against the Raiders (2-10) with his arm.

He connected on two short touchdown passes to Travis Kelce in the first half, then found another tight end, Demetrius Harris, on a 13-yard pass late in the third quarter one play after an apparent TD to Kelce was called off by a replay review.

“Man, he ticked me off today,” Raiders coach Jon Gruden said. “It’s a credit to the guy. He made a third-and-15 play that was right on our sideline. I was outside myself I was so upset some of the plays he made today.”

Mahomes finished 23 for 38 for 295 yards and engineered a late TD drive capped by a 2-yard pass to Chris Conley after Oakland cut the deficit to three.

Oakland added a late field goal, but the Chiefs recovered the onside kick to seal the win.

Mahomes has 41 TD passes on the season, joining Manning (44 in 2004, 41 in `13) and Brady (41 in 2007) as the only QBs with at least 40 in the first 12 games of a season.

Kelce had 12 catches for 168 yards, topping the 1,000-yard mark for the third straight season.

Derek Carr threw three TD passes for the Raiders, but Oakland lost three fumbles that led to three scores for the Chiefs and reached double-digit losses for the 12th time in 16 seasons.

“It’s disappointing,” said running back Doug Martin, who lost one of the fumbles. “I don’t think it should have been that close. We should have been on top. The turnovers really, really hurt us.”

QUICK STRIKE

The Raiders got on the board on Martin’s 1-yard run to cut Kansas City’s lead to 13-7. But Mahomes needed just 57 yards to drive the length of the field. Demarcus Robinson had a 38-yard catch and raced across the entire width of the field to get out of bounds with 12 seconds left and the Chiefs having no timeouts.

Mahomes then found Kelce for his second TD of the game on the next play. Arden Key blocked the extra point to keep the score 19-7.

SCUFFLE

Oakland’s Jared Cook and Kansas City’s Eric Murray got into a scuffle late in the first half when they were jostling near the sideline well after the play. Both players were called for unsportsmanlike conduct on the play.

GIVE IT AWAY

The Chiefs got off to a rough start when Kelce lost a fumble on the opening play from scrimmage. It didn’t hurt the Chiefs, who got the ball back when the Raiders were unable to get a first down and punted after Rodney Hudson was called for a hold on a fourth-down run.

Martin and DeAndre Washington then lost fumbles for Oakland in the first half, leading to field goals for Harrison Butker. Oakland’s other halfback, Jalen Richard, lost a fumble in the third quarter that led to a TD for the Chiefs.

UP NEXT

Chiefs: Host Ravens next Sunday.

Raiders: Host Steelers next Sunday.

— Associated Press —

Geist leads Mizzou to overtime win over UCF

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Missouri senior point guard Jordan Geist has never been afraid of big moments. Last year, he took the blame when late-game passes and shots went awry. On Sunday, Geist played the hero as he led the Tigers to a 64-62 overtime victory over UCF.

Geist scored a team-high 18 points, including a contested 3-pointer at the buzzer to send the game into overtime.

“It feels good to finally get one to fall,” said Geist, who missed last-second shots against Arkansas and Mississippi and had a late pass intercepted against Florida as a junior. “Last year, I took a couple of them that rattled out. To get one to fall, especially a shot like that, I love it.”

Javon Pickett added 13 points and Jeremiah Tilmon had 10 for Missouri (4-3). Tilmon’s up-and-under layup around UCF’s 7-foot-6, 310-pound Tacko Fall with 1:32 left in OT provided the winning margin.

The Knights (6-2) had a chance to win it at the buzzer, but Collin Smith’s desperation shot from just inside the halfcourt line hit the backboard and rimmed out.

Aubrey Dawkins made 5 of 8 shots from 3-point range and led UCF with 22 points.

“He was good,” UCF coach Johnny Dawkins said of his son. “He gave us a chance to win, made some good plays for us.”

B.J. Taylor scored 12 and Smith added 11 for the Knights.

The Tigers had the ball with a chance to take the lead with 15 seconds left in regulation, but Pickett couldn’t inbound the ball within five seconds. That gave the ball back to UCF. When Dawkins hit two free throws, Missouri trailed 57-54. The Tigers had one more chance, and Geist made it count.

“I would rather have the ball in his hands, because he embraces those challenges,” Missouri coach Cuonzo Martin said. “He can deal with whatever goes with it — if it goes in or it doesn’t go in.”

The tying play didn’t go as planned. Martin didn’t divulge how the play was supposed to work.

“Hopefully you’ll see it again and you’ll see it clearly,” Martin said. “I think guys kind of got boggled up.”

TO FOUL OR NOT?

At the end of regulation, Johnny Dawkins faced the eternal coaching question of whether to foul in the final seconds with a three-point lead. UCF didn’t, and Geist made the Knights pay.

“We talked about fouling if the opportunity presented itself, and the young man on the ball didn’t think the opportunity was really there,” Dawkins said. “So he just stayed locked in on him. And you give (Geist) credit, he made a tough, tough 3 — leaning, fading.”

TAKING ON TACKO

Fall wasn’t much of an offensive factor, scoring six points, but he was a game-changer defensively, blocking six shots. He got into Missouri players’ heads, especially in the first half, when the Tigers scored just 21 points on 23 percent shooting.

“He’s a giant,” Missouri sophomore forward Mitchell Smith said. “I’m 6-10, and when I walked by him, I was looking up.”

BIG PICTURE

UCF: The Knights saw their five-game winning streak end, but they continue to play suffocating defense. UCF has held its last six opponents to an average of 58.7 points. The Knights apply heavy pressure on the perimeter and have Fall inside to protect the rim.

Missouri: The Tigers got an unexpected boost from Mitchell Smith, who entered the game averaging just 3.2 points. Smith scored nine points and grabbed seven rebounds. He played 23 minutes before fouling out with 2:16 left in regulation. Smith started the second half in place of senior Kevin Puryear, who went scoreless, and stretched the UCF defense by making both of shots from 3-point range.

“Mitchell is one of our better flashers in the lane, and he can shoot the 3-point shot,” Martin said. “It’s a different element, and he presented some different matchups for us in a positive way on defense.”

UP NEXT

UCF: The Knights return to Orlando for five straight home games, beginning with Saturday’s game against Grambling.

Missouri: The Tigers will play UT Arlington on Tuesday at Mizzou Arena.

— Associated Press —

Palmer scores 23, Nebraska beats Illinois in Big Ten opener

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — James Palmer Jr. only made four field goals Sunday, but the Nebraska guard hit 12 of his 14 free throws to lead the Huskers to a 75-60 win over Illinois.

That’s exactly what Fighting Illini coach Brad Underwood didn’t want to see in the Big Ten conference opener for both teams.

“I thought we might try to set a Nebraska record and see how many free throws we’d let Palmer shoot tonight,” Underwood said. “It’s really funny, you spend a couple days and most of our talk was about not fouling. The one thing Palmer does is he puts a lot of fouls on people. We want him to shoot the ball. That was frustrating. But he’s an awfully good player. That showed today.”

Palmer finished with 23 points, Isaac Copeland scored 16 and Glynn Watson Jr. added 14 for Nebraska.

Nebraska (7-1) made 25 of its 30 free-throw attempts as an aggressive Illinois (2-6) defense committed 23 fouls, playing right into the Huskers’ hands, Palmer said.

“As a team we definitely wanted to get to the free-throw line; we knew they extended their defense and pressured,” he said. “We just wanted to get to the basket.”

Nebraska came out hot, hitting its first three field goals and all six of its free throws to go up 13-2 just 2 1/2 minutes into the game.

Illinois trimmed its deficit to four points midway through the first half but Nebraska closed on a 10-2 run to take a 39-23 halftime lead.

The Illini cut the Husker lead to 10 early in the second half and came within nine three times in the final 17 minutes, the last time at 60-51 on Da’Monte Williams’ jumper with 6:26 left. But a 7-0 Nebraska flurry capped by a breakaway Isaiah Roby dunk put Nebraska up 70-53 with 3:40 left.

“It was really important with these guys, to get on top of them and then keep them at arm’s length,” said Nebraska coach Tim Miles. “That’s been hard for a lot of teams to do. Gonzaga hasn’t done it. Notre Dame didn’t do it. We were able to. I think getting to the foul line for us was important and the fact we made some 3s tonight helped too.” Nebraska hit 6 of 14 3-pointers Sunday .

Underwood agreed that the early lead — and Nebraska’s smothering defense — were critical to the outcome.

“That’s a veteran basketball team who jumped on us early,” Underwood said. “It was uphill from the get-go. We never really got anything established for long periods of time at either end

“Give Nebraska credit, they’re top five in every defensive category. They contest everything. When we don’t shoot the ball and turn it over as much as we did it’s going to be tough night for us.”

Giorgi Bezhanishvili led Illinois with 14 points. Kipper Nichols scored 12 and Ayu Dosunmu added 10 for the Illini.

QUOTABLE

Nebraska radio play-by-play announcer Kent Pavelka called his 1,000th Husker game Sunday.

“Kent Pavelka is an icon in my eyes,” Miles said. “First of all, not many people get to 1,000 games. He’s great with the call and he’s truly a homer, he is with us, he travels with us. He’s part of the team. I hope college athletics never loses that, that’s still a cool part of life, those radio calls. I’m really happy we got a W on his 1000th game.”

BIG PICTURE

Nebraska: The Huskers have now won 16 straight home games. It’s their longest home winning streak since winning 16 in a row in 1981-82 and 1982-83 season. It was Nebraska’s 10th straight Big Ten home win, dating to the start of last season.

Illinois: The Fighting Illini entered the game ranked 18th in 3-pointers, making an average of 10.9 per game on 40 percent shooting. Illinois was 6 of 15 from 3-point range Sunday, shooting exactly 40 percent.

UP NEXT

Nebraska travels to Minnesota Wednesday

Illinois hosts No. 16 Ohio State Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

Missouri to play in AutoZone Liberty Bowl against Oklahoma State

COLUMBIA, Mo. – The University of Missouri has accepted an invitation for its football team to play in the 2018 AutoZone Liberty Bowl, as announced today. The 60th playing of the Liberty Bowl will pit the 8-4 and 23rd-ranked (College Football Playoff) Tigers against the Oklahoma State Cowboys (6-6) in a December 31, matchup in Memphis, Tenn. Kickoff is set for 2:45 p.m. (central time) with the game broadcast on ESPN.

Mizzou, under the direction of third-year Head Coach Barry Odom, comes into bowl season as one of the hottest teams in the country, as it won four straight games, and five of its last six, to close the 2018 regular season. The Tigers have one of the top road wins in the country this season, when they claimed a 38-17 victory at CFP #10 Florida on Nov. 3rd. Mizzou has played one of the toughest schedules in the nation, according to numerous computer ranking models, and has two losses on the last play of the game – including to CFP #14 Kentucky and at 7-5 South Carolina (ranked 28th in the FPI rankings). This will mark the second-straight bowl game appearance under Odom, as his 2017 Tigers closed last season in the Texas Bowl.

Mizzou has a history with the Liberty Bowl, which began in 1959 and is the seventh-oldest college bowl game. The Tigers played twice in the Liberty Bowl during a three-year period, defeating LSU (20-15) in the 1978 classic, and falling to Purdue (28-25) in 1980. The 1978 Mizzou team celebrated its 40th anniversary earlier this season in Columbia.

The Tigers boast numerous ties to the Memphis community, as well, starting with Head Coach Barry Odom, who served as defensive coordinator at the University of Memphis for three seasons (2012-14). Mizzou defensive coordinator Ryan Walters also spent the 2014 season with Odom at Memphis as the team’s cornerbacks coach, and director of athletic performance Rohrk Cutchlow is a Memphis graduate who led athletic performance operations there for four years (2012-15) before being recruited to Mizzou by Odom prior to the 2016 season.

Additionally, Mizzou has a strong roster presence from Memphis and the state of Tennessee. Junior WR Johnathon Johnson, who leads the Tigers with 50 receptions in 2018 (552 yards, four touchdowns) and true freshman RB Tyler Badie, who amassed 735 all-purpose yards this season (including 407 rushing yards and two touchdowns) both hail from Memphis, as does sophomore reserve LB Aubrey Miller, Jr. Johnson attended Melrose High School, while Badie attended Briarcrest Christian and Miller went to Whitehaven. In all, seven current Tigers are Tennessee natives.

The Tigers and Cowboys last met in the 2014 AT&T Cotton Bowl, when Mizzou claimed a 41-31 win to wrap up a 12-2 season. Mizzou leads the alltime series between the two former conference mates, 29-23 overall.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Miles adds Chevis Jackson to Kansas football staff

LAWRENCE, Kan. – Kansas football head coach Les Miles began to shape his staff as he announced the hiring of Chevis Jackson to coach the KU defensive backs on Sunday. Jackson, who played an instrumental role on Miles’ 2007 LSU team that took home a National Championship, spent the previous three seasons mentoring the defensive backs at Ball State.

“Chevis is one of the top young coaches in the game,” said Miles. “He works hard to make a positive impact both on and off the field with the student-athletes he works with. He knows what it takes to be successful on the greatest stage in college football and will help instill that mindset to our program.”

Named the 2017 Mid-American Conference Recruiter of the Year by 247Sports.com, Jackson served as a lead recruiter for the Cardinals, in addition to coaching the defensive backs during his time at BSU.

Prior to his stint at Ball State, Jackson spent the 2015 season as a graduate assistant at his alma mater, LSU, working on Miles’ staff that guided the Tigers to a 9-3 mark and a final national ranking of No. 16.

During the 2013-14 seasons, Jackson worked as a defensive graduate assistant at South Alabama, where he helped the Jaguars earn a bowl bid for the first time in program history, a bid to the 2014 Camellia Bowl. South Alabama’s defense ranked second in the Sun Belt in both scoring defense and total defense in 2013.

Jackson was a four-year letter winner and a three-year starter at cornerback for Miles at LSU. During his time with the program, the Tigers made two SEC Championship game appearances, winning the title in 2007. Jackson recorded two tackles and returned an interception 34 yards in helping lead LSU to a 38-24 win over Ohio State in the 2008 BCS National Championship game.

An All-SEC First Team honoree in 2007, Jackson was selected by the Atlanta Falcons in the third round of the 2008 NFL Draft. He played in the NFL for four seasons with five different teams – Atlanta, Jacksonville, New England, Denver and Carolina.

— KU Athletics —

Smith leads Missouri women to road win at West Virginia

MORGANTOWN, W. Va. – Mizzou Women’s Basketball dominated the No. 21-ranked West Virginia Mountaineers on the road, 68-51, on Sunday afternoon in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge. Mizzou was led by a career performance from junior guard Amber Smith (Shreveport, La.), who set career highs in points (28) and rebounds (13) while recording her fourth double-double of the season.

After entering Sunday’s contest averaging 85.8 points, the Mountaineers were held to a season-low 51 points. The Tigers were able to hold West Virginia to season-low shooting numbers from the field and three-point range, as the Mountaineers shot 27.9 percent from the field (17-for-61) and 27.8 percent from three (5-for-18). West Virginia’s previous season-lows were 78 points, 42.9 percent from the field and 34.6 percent from three.

Mizzou’s has held its opponents to 52.8 points in its six victories this season.

TURNING POINT

Mizzou’s defense was stellar throughout the entirety of the game, and especially the second quarter, as the Tigers held the Mountaineers to six points in the second frame. West Virginia shot a mere 12.5 percent from the field in the quarter, as the Tigers were able to take a 34-23 lead heading into the locker room. Smith led the way for Mizzou on the defensive end in the first half, as four of her six rebounds in the half came on the defensive glass, while all three of her game-high three blocks came in the first frame. Redshirt junior forward Hannah Schuchts (Tallahassee, Fla.) was also effective on the defensive glass, as she pulled down five defensive rebounds and six boards total in the first half while also recording one block.

TOP TIGERS

  • Smith reached 20 points for the fifth time in her career with a career-high 28 points, and recorded her fourth double-double of the season with a career-high 13 rebounds. Smith also set a career-high in field goals made as she shot 10-for-15 from the field while recording a game-high three blocks.
  • Redshirt freshman guard Haley Troup (Gadsden, Ala.) played the best game of her young career, as she set career highs in points (14), rebounds (six), field goals made (five) and three-pointers made (three). Troup shot 5-for-9 from the field and 3-for-5 from three in 18 minutes off the bench.
  • Making her third consecutive start, junior guard Jordan Chavis (Lexington, N.C.) scored 11 points while grabbing a season-high five rebounds.

NOTES

  • Mizzou’s defense held West Virginia to 34.8 points below its season average as the Mountaineers scored 51 points on Sunday. The Tigers were also able to hold West Virginia to season lows in field goal percentage (27.9 percent), three-point percentage (27.8 percent), field goals (17) and three-pointers (five).
  • In Mizzou’s six victories this season, the Tigers have held their opponents to 52.8 points. Mizzou has held its opponent to 65 points or less in seven of eight games this season.
  • Smith recorded her fourth double-double of the season and the sixth of her career with 28 points and 13 rebounds. The double-double performance moved her into a tie for second for the most double-doubles in the SEC this season, trailing only Mississippi State’s Tearia McCowan and LSU’s Ayana Mitchell with five.

UP NEXT

Mizzou returns home to Mizzou Arena to face UMKC on Thursday, Dec. 6. Tipoff is scheduled for 7 p.m.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Bill Snyder Announces Retirement from Kansas State

MANHATTAN, Kan. – Bill Snyder, architect of the greatest turnaround in the history of college football and arguably one of the best college football coaches of all time, announced his retirement today as the head football coach at Kansas State.

The winningest coach in the history of K-State football with a 215-117-1 record, Snyder will transition to a special ambassador role for the University as stated in his current employment agreement.

He will leave as the 20th winningest coach in FBS history and currently ranks second among active FBS coaches in wins. Under Snyder, K-State is the third-winningest program in the Big 12 with 104 total league wins since the league was formed in 1996.

In all, Snyder led K-State to 19 of the school’s 21 all-time bowl appearances, won two conference titles, achieved two No. 1 national rankings, coached players who received a total of 214 All-America honors, 13 Academic All-Americans, was a five-time national coach of the year and seven-time conference coach of the year and also became just the fourth active coach to be inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame (2015).

“Coach Snyder has had an immeasurable impact on our football program, Kansas State University, the Manhattan community and the entire state of Kansas, and it has been an honor and a privilege to get to know and work with him the past two years,” said Athletics Director Gene Taylor. “He and his family have touched the lives of so many people, from student-athletes, coaches, staff and fans, and he is truly one of the greatest coaches and leaders in college football history. His impact on college football is unmatched and legacy is one that will last a lifetime.”

Snyder’s impact at K-State reached far beyond the football field. In addition to rekindling an overwhelming sense of pride in K-State alumni and supporters from coast to coast, the winning culture he ushered in helped spark a University and community-wide revitalization as K-State’s enrollment blossomed from 18,120 when he was hired to a record of more than 24,000.

“This university, this community and this state are deeply indebted to Coach Bill Snyder. Since arriving on campus in 1989, coach has delivered on all his promises — and more. He brought Kansas State University football to the national stage and built a program on the bedrock of integrity, honor and his famed 16 goals for success,” said Richard Myers, Kansas State University president.

“He came here, and stayed here, because of the people. He made us a family — a proud purple family who travel in record numbers to watch him lead the Wildcats to victories, bowls and rankings never achieved before. Coach Snyder has always taken the time and care to turn his players into college graduates, community leaders, successful businessmen and leaders of strong families. Bill Snyder is a legend and his legacy is one that K-Staters for generations will value and cherish,” Myers said.

Following a three-year retirement from 2006-2008, Snyder returned to the sidelines in 2009 with hopes of revitalizing a program that he once built, piece by piece, into a national force. And, after nine seasons back in charge, he did just that – and then some.

Over the past 10 years under Snyder, K-State has totaled 79 victories, advanced to eight bowl games, won a conference championship in 2012 and finished third or better in the ultra-competitive Big 12 Conference in four of the last seven seasons.

Act Two of his renowned career started in 2009 when the Wildcats played for a berth in the Big 12 Championship on the last week of the season and went 6-6 prior to a 7-5 campaign in 2010 and a berth in the inaugural Pinstripe Bowl.

K-State’s climb back into the nation picture continued in 2011 as the Cats went 10-3, finished No. 8 in the BCS standings and earned their first Cotton Bowl invitation in 10 years

The bar was raised again in 2012 as Snyder led the Cats to their third conference championship in school history and first since 2003. Kansas State, which won its first 10 games of the season and finished the regular season at 11-1 with an 8-1 mark in Big 12 play, tied the school record for overall wins and conference victories while also ascending to No. 1 in the BCS rankings following its 10-0 start.

Snyder went on to win the Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award as well as top Big 12 coach honors for the second straight season following the Cats’ memorable 2012 season that culminated with a berth in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl and quarterback Collin Klein being named a finalist for the Heisman Trophy.

From 2013-2018, K-State won an average of almost eight games a year and included a 2014 season that saw the Cats ranked once again in the Top 10 and compete for a Big 12 Championship in the final week of the season.

When Snyder was named the Wildcats’ head football coach in 1988, he inherited a team that had just suffered through its second-consecutive winless season and was on a current 0-26-1 stretch. It was a program that had been through 14 different head coaches and won just 24 percent of its games – going 137-455-18 – between Lynn “Pappy” Waldorf’s 1934 Big Six championship team and his hiring.

But it did not take long for Snyder to change the entire culture of the program. In just his third year, he guided the 1991 Wildcats to a 7-4 record to give K-State just its second winning season since 1970. For his efforts, Snyder was named ESPN’s National Coach of the Year.

Just two seasons later, Snyder would guide Kansas State to a 9-2-1 record and a berth in the 1993 Copper Bowl, marking just the second bowl appearance ever by the Wildcats.

The trip to Tucson was the first of 11-straight postseason appearances for Snyder’s Wildcats, who quickly became a fixture on the Big 8/12 bowl circuit.

Along the way, Kansas State would become just the second team in the history of college football to win 11 games in six of seven seasons from 1997 and 2003.

The 11-win campaign in 2003 brought more firsts for Kansas State as Snyder guided the Wildcats to an unforgettable upset of No. 1 Oklahoma in the 2003 Big 12 Championship game that not only gave the Wildcats their first Big 12 title and BCS bowl berth, but captivated the imagination of the nation’s college football fans.

In his first tenure, Snyder guided Kansas State to 11 winning seasons, four Big 12 North Division titles and three Big 12 Championship games as the Wildcats recorded the eighth-most wins in Division I-A from 1993-2004.

In addition to the team accomplishments, Snyder’s players were also some of the most decorated in the country. In his first 16 years, he produced three national award winners, 45 All-America selections and 68 first team all-conference honorees.

The rebuilding effort and subsequent success engineered at Kansas State by Snyder clearly stands as one of the most amazing in all of college football.

A national search is underway to identify K-State’s next football coach. The department will utilize Ventura Partners to assist with the search.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File