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Monday HS Football Playoff Quarter-Finals

Sports

November 7th, 2011 by Jim Field

Monday, November 7 (7:00 pm)

Class 1-A:

  • St. Albert (11-0) @ Logan-Magnolia (10-1)
  • West Lyon (9-2) @ Emmetsburg (11-0)
  • Aplington-Parkersburg (10-1) @ Saint Ansgar (9-2)
  • Alburnett (11-0) @ West Branch (9-2)

Class 2-A:

  • Spirit Lake (11-0) @ Kuemper Catholic (10-1)
  • West Marshall (11-0) @ PCM (11-0)
  • @ UNI-Dome:  Clarion-Goldfield (7-4) vs. Dyersville Beckman (10-1)
  • Iowa City Regina (11-0) @ Mediapolis (11-0)

Class 3-A:

  • Boyden-Hull/Rock Valley (11-0) @ Harlan (8-3)
  • West Delaware (10-1) @ Decorah (9-2)
  • Maquoketa (10-1) @ Union (9-2)
  • Pella (10-1) @ ADM (11-0)

LSU, Oklahoma State Top AP College Football Poll

Sports

November 6th, 2011 by Jim Field

AP Top 25
RK TEAM RECORD PTS PVS
1 LSU (59) 9-0 1499 1
2 Oklahoma State 9-0 1398 3
3 Stanford 9-0 1369 4
4 Alabama 8-1 1334 2
5 Boise State (1) 8-0 1288 5
6 Oregon 8-1 1184 6
7 Oklahoma 8-1 1138 7
8 Arkansas 8-1 1107 8
9 Clemson 8-1 979 11
10 Virginia Tech 8-1 885 12
11 Houston 9-0 804 14
12 Penn State 8-1 725 16
13 Michigan State 7-2 718 15
14 Georgia 7-2 657 18
15 South Carolina 7-2 654 10
16 Wisconsin 7-2 602 19
17 Kansas State 7-2 546 17
18 USC 7-2 502 21
19 Nebraska 7-2 491 9
20 Georgia Tech 7-2 340 22
21 Texas 6-2 313 NR
22 Michigan 7-2 264 13
23 Cincinnati 7-1 206 23
24 Auburn 6-3 181 25
25 Southern Miss 8-1 161 NR
  • Dropped from rankings: Arizona State 20, West Virginia 24
  • Others receiving votes: TCU 56, Ohio State 50, Arizona State 15, Florida State 12, Washington 8, Iowa 4, Notre Dame 4, Baylor 3, West Virginia 1, Tulsa 1, Virginia 1

Iowa Prevails After Michigan’s Final Drive Comes Up Three Yards Short

Sports

November 6th, 2011 by Jim Field

IOWA CITY, Iowa — Michigan’s Denard Robinson had four shots at the potential game-tying touchdown with 16 seconds left and three yards to go.  Nothing, nothing, nothing, nothing.  Iowa’s struggling defense stopped the electrifying quarterback each time, and the Wolverines (No. 15 BCS, No. 13 AP) were stuck with a 24-16 loss to Iowa on Saturday that damaged their Big Ten title game hopes.  Marcus Coker ran for 132 yards and a pair of touchdowns, while James Vandenberg added 171 yards passing and a TD for the Hawkeyes (6-3, 3-2 Big Ten), who have won three straight over Michigan for the first time in school history.  Michigan (7-2, 3-2) drove 79 yards to Iowa’s 3-yard line on its final drive. But Robinson missed on four straight throws, with Iowa’s B.J. Lowery breaking up Robinson’s final toss to seal the win.  “They showed a lot of heart,” Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said. “It’s almost better that we ended the game that way because that’s a tough circumstance, certainly, and you’re kind of rolling the dice a little bit because (Robinson) is a dangerous thrower but also he can squirt out of there and run that ball in there.”  Iowa’s defense bent on the final drive — in fact, it nearly broke.  But a couple of calls went the Hawkeyes’ way, and a defense that couldn’t stop Minnesota in the fourth quarter in an upset loss last week did the rest.  Vincent Smith appeared to pull the Wolverines within 24-22 on an 82-yard TD run after bouncing off Iowa’s James Morris and going untouched for the score with just over two minutes left.  Replay officials, however, ruled Morris’ elbow had touched the ground. Robinson shook it off and calmly drove the Wolverines down the field.  Then, in the final sequence, Junior Hemingway’s apparent TD grab was ruled out of bounds, and Smith dropped one in the end zone on the next play.  Robinson couldn’t connect with Roy Roundtree on fourth down, sending the jubilant Hawkeyes streaming onto the field.  Robinson finished 17-of-37 passing for 194 yards and two TD passes.  “We can’t leave the game to the officials. We’ve got to do it ourselves,” Robinson said.  Coker’s second touchdown, a 13-yard run with 10:42 left, put Iowa ahead 24-9. Robinson wasted little time answering, finding Kevin Koger for a 7-yard touchdown pass that pulled Michigan within 24-16 with 7:53 to go.  Iowa, which was gashed for a pair of fourth-quarter TDs in last week’s 22-21 loss at Minnesota, stalled on their last two drives and gave Robinson one more shot to win it.  But he didn’t, and now Michigan sits a game back of Michigan State in the division race — with the Spartans holding a tiebreaker edge thanks to a 28-14 win over the Wolverines on Oct. 15.  “It’s still November. We’ve got a lot of games left,” Michigan coach Brady Hoke said. “There’s a lot of football to be played. There’s a lot of things at stake.”  Robinson led the Wolverines to a field goal on their first possession of the second half, cutting Iowa’s lead to 17-9 with 6:19 left in third quarter. But he dinged his elbow and was replaced for a series by Devin Gardner.  Robinson found himself and the Wolverines in a big hole when he got back.  The Hawkeyes took 5:27 off the clock, and Coker burst through a huge hole and went into the end zone untouched to put the Hawkeyes ahead by 15.  The upset was a huge win for Iowa after its debacle in Minnesota — a game that ranked among the worst in Ferentz’s 13-year tenure.  The Hawkeyes came out like they’d had enough of hearing about that stinker, driving 76 yards on just six plays and going ahead 7-0 on Coker’s 4-yard TD run less than five minutes in.  Michigan answered on Robinson’s 5-yard TD pass to Toussaint late in the first quarter. But holder Drew Delio bobbled the snap on the kick, allowing Iowa to stay ahead 7-6.  Iowa made it 14-6 on Vandenberg’s 1-yard TD pass to Brad Herman midway through the second — and pushed it to 17-6 at halftime behind a pair of Robinson blunders.  Robinson’s fumble led to a 42-yard field goal by Mike Meyer, and he finished the half by getting picked off by Christian Kirksey on a deflected ball at the Iowa goal line just before the break.  Michigan had gained over 500 yards of offense in three of its last four games, but Iowa held the Wolverines to 323 yards.  “The guys really had to play good team defense, something we’ve struggled with at times. We have not been the most sound at times, and given up some big plays, so it’s good to see our guys make them earn it and great to come up with stops clearly at the end,” Ferentz said.

Iowa State Turns Back Kansas with Zach Guyer’s Late Field Goal

Sports

November 6th, 2011 by Jim Field

AMES, Iowa — Zach Guyer kicked a 42-yard field goal with 4:30 left to give Iowa State the lead, and backup running back Jeff Woody helped the Cyclones run out the clock in a 13-10 victory over Kansas on Saturday.  Iowa State looked nothing like the team that rolled over Texas Tech 41-7 a week before and struggled to finish drives against the Big 12’s worst defense.   But freshman quarterback Jared Barnett finally got the Cyclones (5-4, 2-4 Big 12) close enough for Guyer to kick his game-winner, leading a march from his own 13 to the Kansas 24. With the wind at his back, Guyer’s kick sailed through the uprights, his second field goal of the day.  Kansas (2-7, 0-5) showed some spark after managing only 46 yards in a 43-0 loss to Texas, but missed two field goals and lost a fumble deep in Iowa State territory in suffering its seventh straight loss. The Jayhawks haven’t won a conference game since beating Colorado, which no longer is in the Big 12, on Nov. 6, 2010.  Barnett, now 2-0 as a starter, ran for 125 yards on 22 carries and threw for another 175 yards, completing 16 of 30 passes with one interception.  He started the winning drive with a 17-yard completion to Aaron Horne, then sprinted 11 yards for another first down. Barnett later hit Albert Gary for gains of 11 and 6 yards before the drive stalled and coach Paul Rhoads called on Guyer, whose 32-yarder had given Iowa State an early 3-0 lead.  Iowa State’s Stephen Ruempolhamer sacked Jordan Webb three plays later to force a punt, and the Cyclones, taking over with 2:37 left, kept the ball the rest of the way as Woody ripped off runs of 6, 8, 6 and 25 yards.  The Cyclones finished with 426 yards of total offense against a team that had been allowing an average of 559 a game in league play. Iowa State now is within one win of bowl eligibility, but the Cyclones have a tough road the rest of the way, finishing against Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Kansas State.  Both teams wasted good scoring opportunities, and that was especially costly for Kansas.  After taking a 7-3 lead when D.J. Beshears scored on a 22-yard reverse late in the first quarter, Kansas drove to the Iowa State 32, 19, 23 and 2 on consecutive possessions and came away with only three points.  Alex Mueller had a 49-yard field goal attempt blocked by A.J. Klein, then was wide right on a 36-yard attempt, and James Sims lost a fumble before Ron Doherty kicked a 19-yard field goal to tie the score at 10 in the third quarter. The Cyclones stiffened on that drive after Kansas had first-and-goal at the 4.  Iowa State had taken a 10-7 lead on wide receiver Aaron Horne’s 18-yard touchdown run on a reverse. Horne came around from the right side, turned the corner, squirted through a group of tacklers at the 10 and raced to the end zone to finish an 11-play, 80-yard drive.  The Cyclones seemed on the verge of taking a 17-10 lead early in the fourth quarter when Barnett and Woody missed a connection on a handoff on second-and-1 at the KU 9. The ball came loose, and Patrick Dorsey recovered for the Jayhawks. Punter Kirby Van Der Kamp had kept that drive going with a 17-yard run on a fake.  After the fumble, Iowa State forced the Jayhawks to go three-and-out on their next two possessions — the first time that had happened all day — and Barnett directed the drive to Guyer’s go-ahead field goal.  Kansas showed an effective running game after being held to minus-2 yards on the ground by Texas. The Jayhawks rushed for 174 yards, but had only 4 yards on the ground and 15 total yards in the fourth quarter.  Webb finished 13 for 21 for 127 yards and no interceptions.

Cashmore Leads Drake Past Jacksonville

Sports

November 6th, 2011 by Jim Field

DES MOINES, Iowa — Pat Cashmore rushed for 160 yards and two touchdowns, including a 4-yarder with 21 seconds remaining, to lead Drake to a 31-24 victory against Jacksonville on Saturday.  Mike Piatkowski threw for 194 yards and two touchdowns for the Bulldogs (8-2, 6-1 Pioneer League), who ended Jacksonville’s 16-game conference winning streak.  Josh McGregor had 249 yards and three TDs passing for the Dolphins (6-3, 5-1), but he was intercepted four times.  Turnovers set up Drake’s tying and go-ahead TDs in the fourth quarter.  After the fourth interception of McGregor, Drake took possession at its own 42 and marched nine plays in 3:12 to Cashmore’s winning score.  Jacksonville took a 24-17 fourth-quarter lead on McGregor’s 48-yard TD pass to Josh Philpart. The Bulldogs punted on their ensuing possession, but the Dolphins’ Jean Bertrand fumbled on the return, and Jacob Dines recovered for Drake near midfield.  Given new life, the Bulldogs drove to Piatkowski’s game-tying, 8-yard touchdown pass to Joey Orlando.

Late Score Gives UNI a Win Over Youngstown State

Sports

November 6th, 2011 by Jim Field

CEDAR FALLS, Iowa — David Johnson scored on a 1-yard run with 1:59 to play to give Northern Iowa a 21-17 victory over Youngstown State on Saturday.  Johnson carried the ball eight times on the winning drive, and caught a 32-yard pass from Jared Lanpher.   A pass-interference penalty also helped Northern Iowa.  Lanpher connected twice with Terrell Sinkfield for touchdowns for the Panthers (7-2, 6-1), who kept their hopes alive for a Missouri Valley title.  Kurt Hess threw a 38-yard touchdown pass to Will Shaw early in the fourth quarter to put the Penguins (5-4, 3-3) ahead 17-14. Jamaine Cook ran for 90 yards and a touchdown for Youngstown State.

Sports podcast, Nov. 5th 2011

Podcasts, Sports

November 5th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

Sports report from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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8-Man/A/4-A High School Football Quarterfinal Playoff Results

Sports

November 5th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

Class 4-A Quarterfinals:

  • Ankeny 27, Southeast Polk 17
  • Bettendorf 45, Iowa City West 13
  • Cedar Falls 35, Cedar Rapids Washington 32
  • West Des Moines Valley 45, West Des Moines Dowling 20

Class A Quarterfinals:

  • Madrid 22, Bedford 0
  • West Hancock 47, Le Mars Gehlen Catholic 40
  • Lisbon 20, Lone Tree 7
  • Newman Catholic 33, Postville 7

Eight Player Quarterfinals:

  • Murray 70, Adair-Casey 54
  • Fremont-Mills 58, East Mills 22
  • Armstrong-Ringsted 22, West Bend-Mallard 12
  • Clarksville 47, Janesville 35

Low pheasant numbers have an economic impact

Ag/Outdoor, News, Sports

November 5th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

Lower pheasant numbers are not only hurting the efforts of hunters to find the birds, they are also putting a damper on the economic impact of hunting. D-N-R wildlife technician, Mark McInroy, says sureveys shows hunters spend an average of 125-dollars each day they are out. McInroy says that’s one of the most unfortunate things about the drop, as he says lower bird numbers mean “only the most passionate hunters keep involved” and he says that impacts grocery stores, restaurants, gas stations, motels are impacted. Hunting clubs are one alternative for those who want tobe sure they get a bird during their hunt.

Curt Sandahl brings in birds from the Dakotas to stock the Winterset Hunt club. He says it gives the hunters the experience they’re looking for. Sandahl says every day is opening day because the birds haven’t been hunted before and they act like opening day birds. Sandahl also sees an impact from the lower bird numbers, as Iowa’s position as a top pheasant state drops. “Twenty-years ago, every small town hotel was booked for the first three weekends (of the pheasant season) from people from out of state,” Sandahl says. He says South Dakota now has those people from all over the country going to their state to hunt pheasants.

(Radio Iowa)

Lake Manawa No-Wake Restriction Removed

Ag/Outdoor, News, Sports

November 4th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS – The no-wake restriction for boaters on Lake Manawa was removed today (Friday) after the Iowa Department of Natural Resources determined the lake was back down to acceptable levels.  The no-wake restriction had been in place since June 27th, to minimize the impact of the high water to infrastructure around the lake. Many of the docks were submerged and posed a safety hazard to boats operating at higher speeds.

Dan Jacobs, park manager for Lake Manawa, said they will place a boat dock on the west boat ramp that will remain in place through the winter, but the docks on north and south boat ramps will be removed next week.

(DNR Press Release)