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Post by CF4L on May 29, 2011 17:48:52 GMT -5
APFL STANDINGS AFTER WEEK 10 Sioux City Bandits 8-0 Iowa Blackhawks 4-3 Mid-Missouri Outlaws 4-4 Kansas Koyotes 2-5 Springfield Wolfpack 2-5 Florida Scorpions 0-1 Kansas City Matadors 0-2 Week 10 ResultsIowa Blackhawks 40 @ Mid-Missouri Outlaws 44 Kansas City Matadors 0 @ Sioux City Bandits 112 Week 11 Games3 June (Fri): Sioux City Bandits @ Iowa Blackhawks 7:35PM 4 June (Sat): Springfield Wolf Pack @ Kansas Koyotes 7:05PM
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Post by CF4L on May 29, 2011 17:53:05 GMT -5
Outlaws 44, Blackhawks 40www.sedaliademocrat.com/sports/football-34501-later-outlaws.htmlSeth Stringer The Sedalia Democrat With his team on the cusp of losing its fifth straight and falling further out of the American Professional Football League playoff picture, linebacker Reggie Singletary knew someone had to step up to lift the Mid-Missouri Outlaws out of their funk. That person just happened to be him. Capping off a comeback that started with the Outlaws down 40-22 with eight minutes to play, Singletary picked off Charles Wright inside the Mid-Missouri 5-yard line and tiptoed the right sideline all the way into the end zone to lift the Outlaws to a 44-40 win over the Iowa Blackhawks. “He was baiting me all night long and I knew with that side-arm throw, I was going to get him one time,” Singletary said. It was the lone mistake in an otherwise perfect night for Wright, who threw for 208 yards and five touchdowns — three of which went to his favorite target Robert Kirvin. But the hiccup happened to go to the wrong person in Singletary, a former Missouri Valley College standout who wasn’t about to be tackled after the game-changing pick. “I used to play a little running back so I still got a little giddy up,” Singletary said. The victory, the first for Mid-Missouri since April 16, moved the Outlaws to 4-4 and within a 1/2 game of the second-seeded Blackhawks (5-4) in the APFL standings. “We said it all week, we just need to play Outlaw football,” Outlaws coach Ben Lyles said. “It’s great to be back and it feels great to be back in control of our own destiny.” The comeback started with a Marcus James 3-yard TD run up the left side, his second touchdown of the night, with 6:09 to play. Down 40-29, the Outlaws blocked a field goal try and Kyle Middleton, who threw for 161 yards and four scores, found Darryl Madry for his second score of the night on a 6-yard strike in the left side of the end zone. The two hooked up again on the two-point conversion to slice the deficit to 40-37 with 50.1 seconds to play, but the ensuing onside kick failed. That’s when Singletary stepped up, and the defense followed up with a clutch defensive stop to seal the win. “Right now, with how this team’s been going, we have to break this down and treat it like one win,” said Singletary, who recovered a fumble earlier in the game. “That’s all it is, but it’s a huge win.” The dramatic finish came after the Outlaws squandered an early 15-6 lead only to trail 21-15 at halftime. The deficit grew to 28-15 and then 40-22 before the Outlaws responded to win in dramatic fashion that brought the house down. “I think the building just finally settled down,” said Lyles, who was drenched in a Gatorade bath. The fans deserved this.”
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Post by CF4L on May 29, 2011 17:53:26 GMT -5
Close call goes against Blackhawkssouthwestiowanews.com/articles/2011/05/29/council_bluffs/sports/doc4de1c0c95ac40893597331.txtSEDALIA, Mo. – In a series that has already produced classic after classic, Iowa and Mid-Missouri played another doozy at the Mathewson Events Center Saturday. Reggie Singletary’s length-of-the-field interception return for a touchdown with less than a minute to play gave the Outlaws a 44-40 come-from-behind victory over the Blackhawks in American Professional Football League play. The game-winning score came on a fourth-and-goal play for Iowa, which fell to 4-3 with loss. Mid-Missouri, which trailed 40-22 in the fourth quarter, snapped a four-game losing streak to improve to 4-4. The Blackhawks, however, had a chance to win the game on the final play. But for the second straight year, a controversial call sent them home with a loss. Tavaris Capers caught a Chuck Wright pass as time expired, but he was ruled out of bounds. A year ago, an official ruled Iowa’s Robert Kirvin trapped the ball in the corner of the end zone on the final play of a 41-38 Outlaw victory. This was the fifth time in six meetings between the teams that the game has gone down to the final play. Each team has won three games in the series. Iowa took the first meeting this season 72-62 in Council Bluffs. They’ll meet again in Sedalia on June 18.
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Post by CF4L on May 29, 2011 22:41:12 GMT -5
Bandits win most lopsided game in team historywww.siouxcityjournal.com/sports/football/amateur/article_48a35556-7a1f-5a8b-ab20-83a57d404307.htmlby Jerry Giese SIOUX CITY - Obviously, the Sioux City Bandits have the best defense in the American Professional Football League, in terms of takeaways. Rahn Franklin had three interceptions, returning two for touchdowns for a defense that forced 10 turnovers Sunday afternoon in the most lopsided victory in the Bandits' 11-year history. Franklin credited a heavy pass rush as the source of the takeaways in a 112-0 rout. It was the first shutout in franchise history for a team that has forced 34 turnovers (23 interceptions, 11 fumble recoveries) heading into this Friday's road game at Council Bluffs against the Iowa Blackhawks. Coach Butch Faulkenberry's 8-0 Bandits, who set the tone for the romp with 26 first-quarter points created by four Matador turnovers, shattered the former mark for points in a game established on April 29 when Sioux City ripped Mid-Missouri 80-20. "Those big guys up front, they're special," said Franklin, a former Buena Vista University athlete who tied a single-game interception record first set in 2002 by Corey Mayes, then tied in last Saturday's 43-21 win over Springfield by Taylor Schumacher. "The ball gets in the air when that line gets the pressure. If that doesn't happen, we don't get a chance to make plays on loose balls." "Our pass rush the entire game was impressive," said Faulkenberry, whose team clinched home-field advantage for the APFL playoffs. "It didn't matter whoever we put in there, we were tough at the line of scrimmage. You get a good pass rush, the quarterback will put the ball in the air and we're playing center field. That's how we pick it off." Franklin's fourth interception of the season, which was returned 20 yards for a touchdown, was one of four, fourth-quarter defensive touchdowns for Sioux City, which limited Kansas City to one first down and one yard of total offense. Jason Bonwell and Brian Okonofua, who were among the linemen applying pressure to Matador quarterback Sohail Jouya, each returned fumbles for scores in the final frame along with J.J. Washington, who also returned a kickoff 45 yards for a score. Linebacker Spetlar Tonga, the Bandits' career leader with 534 total tackles, was responsible for two of Kansas City's first-quarter turnovers. Tonga's fumble recovery at the Matadors' 6-yard line at the 12:12 mark led to the first of quarterback Scott Jensen's three touchdown passes, a six-yarder to Damon Mothershead. One play after Tonga's second fumble recovery of the game and fourth of the season, Jensen threaded a 21-yard touchdown pass to Eddie Pertilla. The first of Franklin's two 20-yard interception return touchdowns came in the first quarter. Meanwhile, Buddy Williams' interception led to a two-yard touchdown run for 6-4, 300-pound defensive lineman Simi Toeaina, whose fumble in the end zone to complete a three-play, 16-play drive was recovered by 6-4, 275-pound lineman Nehemiah Blackburn. "Coach preached to us that defensively and offensively, we had to have a solid game today," said Franklin. "This was a tuneup game for next week. We need to make sure we take care of things and not worry about our opponent."
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Post by Banana Cat on May 29, 2011 23:55:06 GMT -5
I see Sioux City and Kansas winning big this week.
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Post by CF4L on Jun 3, 2011 7:47:31 GMT -5
Bandits face Blackhawks with thoughts still on Siouxlandwww.siouxcityjournal.com/sports/football/amateur/article_851442d2-0219-57c9-9819-41d9a91f02ef.htmlBy Michael Brauer SIOUX CITY -- After 12 hours hauling sandbags and loading trailers, Butch Faulkenberry couldn't blame any of his players for showing up a little late to Wednesday's practice. Sometimes, the Sioux City Bandits coach said, there are more important things than football. "Our team's been real busy this week helping out as much as we possibly can," said Faulkenberry from behind the wheel of his Suburban. He and a handful of players were back at it again Thursday, pulling a trailer full of sandbags. "We've had a real long week." The Bandits, fresh off a record-setting rout of Kansas City, travel tonight to face the Iowa Blackhawks in their final road game of the season. Their thoughts, though, will remain in Sioux City - where unprecedented floodwaters have emptied out nearby Dakota Dunes and threaten several surrounding communities. The flooding directly affected the team, with the homes of two coaches, a trainer and an equipment manager in danger of being reclaimed by the bulging Missouri River - which could be up to seven feet past its flood stage by mid-June. The undefeated and rarely contested Bandits (8-0) will have to try and put that out of their minds, for a few hours at least, while facing a Blackhawks squad they've already beaten twice this season. "The game is important, no doubt. Tomorrow at seven o'clock that's what will be on our mind," said receiver Damon Mothershead, one of several Bandits who helped fight floodwaters on Wednesday and Thursday. "But right now, we're focused on the Bandit family." Firday night, his thoughts will turn to an Iowa (4-3) team that squandered an 18-point lead last week against Mid-Missouri and lost 44-40 on an interception return for touchdown in the game's final minute. In the meantime, the Bandits were putting up jaw-dropping numbers against APFL provisional member Kansas City. The final score was 112-0, a score so lopsided that the ticker on the Bandits' web site after the game read "12-0". It couldn't handle the triple digits. "I don't think anybody was real excited about that 112," Faulkenberry said. "We were trying to get out of there, in all honesty." The coach even tried putting his offensive linemen on defense in the second half, one that his starters watched the entire time from the sideline. "We're never going to tell our guys not to play; we're never going to feel ashamed about our performance," Faulkenberry said. "But we weren't out there with the intent to try and run it up." They hardly had time to celebrate the franchise-record output. Right about the time the Bandits were pummeling KC, people in the Dunes were receiving recommended evacuation notices. By Thursday, with the Missouri River already spilling over, South Dakota Gov. Dennis Daugaard asked Dunes residents to leave their homes before the night was up. More than 20 Bandits spent all Wednesday packing residents up and filling sandbags in Dakota Dunes, North and South Sioux City. "Cars up and down the road, taking back roads, side roads - I mean, the amount of trucks carrying dirt is amazing," linebacker Thomas Wells said, describing the scene. "It kind of makes the game seem a little smaller than it actually is. Sure, the game's important, and as players it feels important, but something like this is a little bigger." Working 'round the clock from 7:30 a.m. to the evening hours, Wells and several others missed out on their weekly film session at the start of Wednesday's practice. Good thing the Bandits already know their opponent well. Sioux City beat the Blackhawks 57-50 in the season opener, also the Bandits' APFL debut. In the rematch one month later, Sioux City left no doubt - a 50-26 rout. Now, the Bandits sit first in the league and will be for the rest of the season; meaning they could finish out with five straight games at the Tyson Events Center if all goes according to plan (three regular season and two playoff games). "The possibility of running five home games off in a row, I guarantee you that's something we're extremely excited about," Faulkenberry said. "We've gotta go take care of what we're doing now. When we get back, we'll be glad to be home to stay, that's for sure." Floodwaters or not.
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Post by CF4L on Jun 3, 2011 12:09:30 GMT -5
Blackhawks play Bandits Fridaysouthwestiowanews.com/articles/2011/06/03/council_bluffs/sports/doc4de8fb9060d7e608862936.txtBy Tony Boone After suffering a controversial setback in Sedalia, Mo., last weekend, Iowa enters the final month of the American Professional Football League season with little margin for error. The Blackhawks (4-3) carry a half-game lead over idle Mid-Missouri (4-4) for second place heading into Friday’s home game with unbeaten Sioux City (8-0). Kickoff is set for 7:35 p.m. “Certainly, we’re in a mode right now where we’re trying to get the highest possible seed in the playoffs we can,” Iowa coach Mike Wolff said. “We’re shooting for No. 2. No. 1 is out.” The Bandits have been dominant thus far in their first APFL season. They’ve scored 43 points or more in all eight of their games and can wrap up the regular-season crown with a win tonight. Sioux City has already beaten the reigning two-time champion Blackhawks twice – winning 57-50 in a wild opener at the Tyson Event Center, then taking the rematch 50-26 at the MAC. Last Sunday, the opportunistic Bandits pasted the overmatched Kansas City Matadors 112-0 while collecting 10 turnovers. They’ve forced 34 in all during their eight-game winning streak. Ill-timed turnovers have been a bugaboo for Iowa recently. Mid-Missouri returned an interception for a touchdown in the final seconds last week to win 44-40 in a game it trailed by 18 only minutes earlier. Sioux City scored on an early pick-6 in its last trip to the MAC. Blackhawk quarterback Chuck Wright said ball security is crucial for tonight’s contest as his team tries to earn its way back into the title hunt. With only four games left, it’s crunch time for Iowa. “Every game’s a must-win, but we’ve got enough veterans on the team who understand the goal is still attainable,” Wright said. “If we play well and make it back to the title game, we’ll have the opportunity to be the only team that has won the championship on the road. “That should be the goal right now.” Counting tonight’s contest, Iowa has only two home games left during the regular season. It also has road dates at Mid-Missouri and Kansas, which have historically been tough places to play. Defensive end Ryan Hoden said everything the Blackhawks do at this point is critical. He feels his unit needs to be solid, starting tonight, if Iowa is going to make another title run. “With a team like Sioux City, you really have to come focused,” Hoden said. “We show moments where we’re pretty good because we are fundamentally sound. But other times, we lose focus. Then they hit us with a big play when we make a mistake.” In the two previous meetings, the Bandits have hit six scoring passes from midfield or beyond against Iowa’s defense. The Blackhawks may go with the smaller, quicker unit they used against Mid-Missouri last week in an attempt to limit those big plays. With the path to the APFL title likely heading through Sioux City, Iowa would like to prove to itself that it’s on the Bandits’ playing level. Since the opener, no one has come close to the league leaders. “It would give us a psychological advantage if we could knock off Sioux City Friday night,” Wolff said. “Heading into the playoffs, that would be a huge win for us.”
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Post by Banana Cat on Jun 4, 2011 5:52:46 GMT -5
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Post by Banana Cat on Jun 4, 2011 5:55:03 GMT -5
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Post by CF4L on Jun 4, 2011 10:46:40 GMT -5
ugh, gotta check your facts Mr. Sioux City Journal writer.
The fumble on the goal line was by Chris Bradford.
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Post by CF4L on Jun 4, 2011 14:32:26 GMT -5
Blackhawks fall again to Banditsby Tony Boone southwestiowanews.com/articles/2011/06/04/council_bluffs/sports/doc4de9b43a75d60765683711.txtLeave it to the Bandits to steal one on the road. Unbeaten American Professional Football League leader Sioux City claimed a third victory over two-time defending champion Iowa Friday with a takeaway in the closing minutes. Taylor Schumacher stripped the ball from Blackhawk fullback Chris Bradford and recovered it inside the S.C. 5-yard line with 1:48 to play to seal a 49-42 Bandit win at the Mid-America Center. The victory locked up the regular-season APFL title for league newcomer Sioux City (9-0). With it, the Bandits will play at home throughout the playoffs. “People kind of wanted to get us, being the big dog coming down a league,” Schumacher said. “Beating them three times in a row kind of puts a stamp on the league, saying ‘we’re here.’” Iowa dropped to 4-4 with the loss and fell into a second-place tie with Mid-Missouri, which rallied from 18 points down to beat the Blackhawks last week in Sedalia, Mo. The two teams meet again there later this month with the potential No. 2 postseason seed on the line. Like in its 57-50 season-opening loss in Sioux City, Iowa had its chances Friday. Neither team led by more than eight points the entire way as the two traded scores throughout. The Blackhawks held the advantage for most of the first half until Sioux City turned a late second-quarter fumble into a 1-yard TD sneak by Scott Jensen to take its first lead at 25-21. Iowa never led after that, but it tied the game at 28, 35 and 42 after halftime. For the second time in three meetings between the teams, Fredrick Bruno scored the decisive touchdown in the fourth quarter. His 31-yard reception of a Jensen pass with six minutes remaining was the final score of the game. Jensen torched the Blackhawk defense for 282 yards and three long touchdowns. Eddie Pertilla had two of them in the first half and finished with 115 receiving yards. “Sioux City’s got extremely talented position players, and it starts with Scott Jensen,” Iowa coach Mike Wolff said. “We thought we had some good coverages and a couple of times we missed a check or a coverage. Other than that, they’re just fabulous.” Steve Rush caught three touchdown passes from Chuck Wright for the Blackhawks, and he and Robert Kirvin each finished with seven receptions. Mell Holliday also had a touchdown run for Iowa while Bradford’s fumble came on his lone carry. “Certainly, that didn’t cost us the game,” Wolff said. “We had our opportunities prior to that point.” Sioux City (9-0) 13 12 10 14 - 49 Iowa (4-4) 21 0 14 7 - 42 I: Steve Rush 28 pass from Chuck Wright (Zach Kohlhoff kick) SC: Eddie Pertilla 28 pass from Scott Jensen (Nick Hope kick) I: Mell Holliday 1 run (Kohlhoff kick) SC: Pertilla 45 pass from Jensen (kick failed) I: Rush 2 pass from Wright (Kohlhoff kick) SC: Andrew Prohaska 1 run (run failed) SC: Jensen 1 run (kick failed) SC: Hope 24 FG I: Rush 10 pass from Wright (Kohlhoff kick) SC: Fredrick Bruno 2 run (Hope kick) I: Mike Stuart 55 kickoff return (Kohlhoff kick) SC: Damon Mothershead 10 run (Hope kick) I: Robert Kirvin 15 pass from Wright (Kohlhoff kick) SC: Bruno 31 pass from Jensen (Hope kick) INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING: SC, Prohaska 9-34, Jensen 4-1, Bruno 2-1, Mothershead 1-10. I, Holliday 10-34, Bradford 1-3, Wright 1-2, Augustine 1-(-4). PASSING: SC, Jensen 15-19-0 282. I, Wright 18-29-0 170. RECEIVING: SC, Mothershead 6-76, Pertilla 5-115, Prohaska 3-60, Bruno 1-31. I, Rush 7-73, Kirvin 7-59, Stuart 2-25, Holliday 1-7, Capers 1-6.
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Post by CF4L on Jun 4, 2011 14:37:51 GMT -5
Koyotes host Springfield Saturday by Rick Peterson Jr. cjonline.com/sports/football/2011-06-03/koyotes-host-springfield-saturdayAfter a morale-boosting 48-42 win over the Mid-Missouri Outlaws two weeks ago, the Kansas Koyotes have been anxious to pick up where they left off. The Koyotes finally will get that chance at 7:05 tonight when they host the Springfield Wolf Pack in Landon Arena. “Normally, you’d like a bye week at that time of the season to heal up a little bit, but our guys were ready to play again,” Koyotes coach Troy Biladeau said. “It was a great win (against Mid-Missouri), and we’re looking forward to getting back out there in front of the home crowd and trying to put on a good show. “We understand that it’s a really important game, and we’re at home so I don’t think we’ll come out flat.” Biladeau said the bye week gave his improving offense a chance to get plenty of work in. “During the bye week I had the offense run 50 plays on air while the defense did conditioning, just to get the reps and the continuity,” he said. “And during this week we did more 7-on-7 and team type stuff. We let some of our younger guys get some reps, too. I think offensively, the receivers understand the routes a lot better and what we’re tying to accomplish.” Quarterback Carlos Kelly threw for 162 yards and four touchdowns against Mid-Missouri, while Mike Williams caught four passes for 77 yards with two touchdowns. The Koyotes are 1-1 on the season against Springfield (2-5). The Wolf Pack won the first meeting 28-19 before Kansas bounced back for a 48-28 victory the following week. “We watched our film and obviously they’re watching our film, too, so we’re going to change up some things up,” Biladeau said of the Wolf Pack. “They’re a pretty good defensive team. If you look at their scores, they’re games are pretty low scoring and they hold teams in check. The definitely cause some problems defensively. “They also have a veteran quarterback and can be dangerous on offense.” The game likely will go a long way in deciding the fourth and final spot for the American Professional Football League playoffs. “Our guys have a sense of urgency because we really need this win if we want to be in the playoffs,” Biladeau said. “It’s really for two games because whoever wins this game will have the tiebreaker, so that’s an extra game, basically.”
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Post by CF4L on Jun 4, 2011 14:39:55 GMT -5
Outlaws Football Combine set for June 18www.sedaliademocrat.com/sports/outlaws-34606-combine-football.htmlThe Mid-Missouri Outlaws will hold a football combine at 10 a.m. June 18 at the Mathewson Exhibition Center. The combine is open to all students entering grades nine through 12. The cost is $50 per participant and registration is set for 9:30 a.m. on the day of the event. All participants will receive an Outlaws T-shirt and one free admission to that night’s game against the Iowa Blackhawks. For more information, email Ben Lyles at b_lyles10@hotmail.com.
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Post by CF4L on Jun 5, 2011 0:13:13 GMT -5
Koyotes post 32-26 victorycjonline.com/sports/football/2011-06-04/koyotes-post-32-26-victoryby Rick Peterson Jr. Topeka Capital-Journal All season long, Troy Biladeau’s main focus has been finding a way to get his young Kansas Koyotes into the playoffs. The Koyotes are now in a perfect position to do so after a nail-biting 32-26 win over Springfield on Saturday night at Landon Arena. “I told (Koyotes owner Ralph Adams) before we even started that the first few games were probably going to be a struggle,” Biladeau said. “The one thing I’ve been stressing this whole time is the playoffs. I’ve never said anything about a record to anyone. I don’t care about what our record is. I want to be in the playoffs and see what happens.” The Koyotes, who have won back-to-back games to improve to 3-5 on the season, now have a one-game lead and the tiebreaker advantage on Springfield in the race for the fourth and final spot in the American Professional Football League playoffs. “We’re where we want to be,” veteran defensive lineman Jermaine Smith said. “In the beginning, we knew we had to be where we are now. It’s a great accomplishment, because we had a lot of young guys. We’re finally starting to play ball. We’ll be alright.” For the second straight game, the Koyotes relied on a late defensive stand to secure the victory. Trailing by a touchdown late, the Wolf Pack got the ball to the 2-yard line before the Koyotes’ defense forced an incomplete pass on fourth down with 32 seconds remaining. Kansas trailed 26-13 early in the third quarter before scoring the game’s last three touchdowns. The game-winning touchdown came midway through the fourth quarter when Carlos Kelly hit Mike Williams for a five-yard TD. Biladeau said he was pleased with how his team performed down the stretch. “We didn’t bring that fire to start the game, but obviously in the second half we did,” Biladeau said. “In the first half, it wasn’t an X’s and O’s thing, it was ‘Are we going to tackle or are we not.’ I thought the defense really stepped up in the second half, and the offense played a lot better, too.” Springfield was able to grab the early momentum, forcing a Koyotes fumble on the opening kickoff and then scoring on a 1-yard run by Larry White. However, the Koyotes answered with a 9-yard touchdown pass to Naji Shinskia. The Wolf Pack later forged a 20-6 lead late in the first half after a 25-yard touchdown reception by Cedrick Dewberry and an 18-yard touchdown run by Alvin Johnson. A long kickoff return late in the first half by Ben Vann helped set up a 1-yard touchdown plunge by Kelly with 16 seconds left, making the score 20-13. The first half ended in controversy after a Hail Mary heave from Justin Strodtman to Josh Pell was ruled incomplete in the end zone. The officials ruled that the ball hit the surface before Pell hauled it in. The Wolf Pack took a two-touchdown lead early in the third quarter on a 26-yard touchdown pass to Anton Collum but didn’t find the end zone again. The Koyotes responded with a 12-yard touchdown pass to Shinskia. Kansas then forced a turnover and tied the game late in the third quarter on a 2-yard Shinskia run. Kelly was 10 of 18 passing with three touchdowns and one interception, and Strodtman was 8 of 24 with two touchdowns and one interception for 107 yards. The Koyotes will travel next weekend to Sioux City to face the undefeated Bandits. Springfield 7 13 6 0 — 26 Kansas 6 7 13 6 — 32 Springfield — White 2 run (Pell kick) Kansas — Shinskia 11 pass from Kelly (kick failed) Springfield — Dewberry 25 pass from Strodtman (kick blocked) Springfield — Johnson 18 run (Pell kick) Kansas — Kelly 1 run (Cox kick) Springfield — Cullom 26 pass from Strodtman (kick failed) Kansas — Shinskia 12 pass from Kelly (run failed) Kansas — Shinskia 2 run (Cox kick) Kansas — Williams 5 pass from Kelly (kick failed) INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Springfield: Strodtman 12-50, White 9-29, Thomas 5-19, Johnson 4-40, Cullom 2-13, Alvarado 1-4. Kansas: Miller 5-16, Kelly 5-14, Lowe 3-5, Shinskia 2-8. PASSING — Springfield: Strodtman 8-24-1 107 yards; Kansas: Kelly 10-18-1 96 yards. RECEIVING — Springfield: Dewberry 3-48, Alvarado 3-31, Cullom 1-26, White 1-3; Kansas: Williams 4-15, Shinskia 3-32, Freeman 1-18, Kearse 1-17, Miller 1-14.
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Post by Banana Cat on Jun 5, 2011 3:11:53 GMT -5
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