Thursday, December 24, 2009

SE Missourian Christmas Tournament

I hope you are ready for some (a lot) of high school basketball. The annual Southeast Missourian Christmas Tournament begins Saturday morning at the Show-Me-Center.

What else are you going to do Saturday... Play with your new toys, clean-up all the wrapping paper, break down boxes to set out for recycling or eat left over fruitcake (I am one of the few oddballs who likes fruitcake). All of those things will still be waiting after you leave the Show-Me-Center. Treat yourself... take in a game or two.


2009 Tournament seedings:

1. Scott CC
2. Notre Dame
3. Jackson
4. Charleston
5. Advance
6. Cape Central
7. Oak Ridge
8. Oran
9. Meadow Heights
10. Bell City
11. Leopold
12. Delta
13. Woodland
14. Chaffee
15. Scott City
16. Kelly

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Logan Baseball Card Show Cancelled

Just got this concerning the annual John A. Logan baseball card show. It's a shame it's been cancelled. I always enjoyed covering the event and getting a chance to talk baseball in the middle of winter.


Logan’s baseball card show canceled
Logan Media Services

CARTERVILLE – For 23 years, the Jerome “Mimi” Alongi Baseball Card and Sports Memorabilia Show has been a fixture at John A. Logan College. That long-standing tradition will take at least a one-year hiatus with the announcement this week that the January show has been cancelled.

JALC Athletic Director and head baseball coach Jerry Halstead explained that there has been a shift in philosophy within the St. Louis Cardinals organization, for many years now the provider of guests at the show. Players are no longer encouraged by the club to participate in shows like the one at Logan.

Halstead said he thought he had a chance at landing former Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog, but when it was learned a couple of weeks ago that Herzog will be inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2010, the New Athens native’s itinerary changed. Halstead then thought he had brokered a deal to get Cards’ third baseman candidate, David Freese, on campus as the featured speaker. Freese, a St. Louis native, then backed out of the deal after a recent DUI offense.

“It’s been a great 23 years and we’ve had some wonderful guests over the years,” Halstead said. “Hopefully, we will be able to bring the show back a year from now.”


Marion native Ray Fosse, an all-star catcher with the Cleveland Indians and Oakland As, was the first-ever guest at the show in the late 1980s. The only other non-Cardinals featured were ex-Logan standout Jamey Carroll, an infielder who just last week signed a two-year contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers, and Kirk Rueter, a lefthanded pitcher from Nashville, who enjoyed a successful career with Montreal and San Francisco.

A few former and current Cardinals who have made the trek to Carterville include: Vince Coleman, Andy Benes, Alan Benes, John Mabry, Tom Pagnozzi, Mike Matheny, Gary Gaetti, Kyle McClellan, Brad Thompson, Joe Torre and Herzog. The show was organized as a fundraiser for the Logan baseball team and helped finance spring trips to Florida and Alabama.



Monday, December 21, 2009

Salukis Ranked #6 In Final FCS Poll

The final Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) top 25 polls are released today.

Southern Illinois ends the year ranked 6th in both the Coaches and Sports Network Top 25.

It's Southern's third highest ranking to end a season in program history. The Salukis finished number three in 2007 and number one in 1983.

No surprise with the top spot... National Champion Villanova ranked in the top spot and Montanta finishes number two.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Former MU Tiger Chase Coffman Placed On IR

I guess you can say Chase Coffman was redshirted for his rookie season in the NFL. Wednesday morning the Cincinnati Bengals placed the former Missouri TE on injured reserved with bone spurs.

Coffman was a third round selection by Cincinnati in this years draft but did no see the field. He was inactive for each of the first 12 games this season.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Missouri State Soccer Awards

The Missouri State High School Soccer Coaches Association announces it's 2009 All State Teams.

Class 1

First Team:
Brent Rodewald (senior) Saxony Lutheran

Second Team:
Trevor Mcbuce (senior) Saxony Lutheran

Honorable Mention:
Shawn Hadler (junior) Saxony Lutheran


Class 2

First Team:
Joseph Froemsdorf (senior) Notre Dame

Second Team:
Jack Mocherman (senior) Notre Dame
Jacob Pewitt (senior) Notre Dame


Class 3

Second Team:
Clayton Baker (sophomore) Jackson



Sunday, December 6, 2009

Mizzou Accepts Bid from Texas Bowl

Missouri To Play Navy on Dec. 31

Columbia, Mo. - The University of Missouri has accepted an invitation to play in the 2009 Texas Bowl, as announced today by Mizzou and Texas Bowl officials.

The Tigers (8-4 overall and 4-4 in Big 12 play, 2nd in the Big 12 North Division) will play in the 4th annual edition of the game, set for Dec. 31st in Houston, Texas, against the United States Naval Academy (8-4, with one game left to play on Dec. 12th against Army). The game will kickoff at 2:30 p.m. (central) from Reliant Stadium (home of the NFL's Houston Texans) and will be televised nationally on ESPN.

The game will mark MU's fifth-consecutive bowl game (an MU record), and sixth bowl appearance in the last seven seasons overall under Head Coach Gary Pinkel, after Mizzou had gone to only two bowl games in a span of 19 seasons dating from 1984-2002. Pinkel has now tied College Football Hall of Fame Coach Dan Devine for most bowl appearances at Mizzou, with his six bowl outings. The Texas Bowl appearance will be Mizzou's 27th bowl game overall, with MU holding a 12-14 mark in its previous 26 outings.

The Mizzou Athletic Ticket Office will begin taking online orders for the Texas Bowl beginning tonight (Sunday, Dec. 6th) at
www.Mutigers.ocm. Fans may also order over the phone by calling 1-800-CAT-PAWS (884-PAWS in Columbia) or in person at the Mizzou Arena Ticket Office beginning Monday (Dec. 7th) at 8 a.m., but are strongly encouraged to order online to ensure prompt service. Mizzou's tickets are priced from a range of $25 to $75.

The Mizzou Alumni Association will host the Official Mizzou Texas Bowl Tour Dec. 30 - Jan. 1. Full air/land and land-only packages are available to Houston. To join the Official Mizzou Texas Bowl Tour visit
www.MizzouSportsTravel.com or call 888-MIZZOU-1 (649-9681). The Association will plan bowl events for Tiger fans including a pre-game tailgate. Details will be released shortly.

For more information about the 2009 Texas Bowl, and the city of Houston, please visit the official site of the Texas Bowl, at
www.texasbowl.org.

Friday, December 4, 2009

FCS Quarterfinal Previews

Looking for indepth previews of this weekends FCS Quarterfinal games? You have come to the right place. I would have written these myself, but, you know...got a little busy.

Here they are in all of their glory from www.sportsnetwork.com

By Brett Kahn, FCS Assistant

Bethlehem, PA (Sports Network) - Here are the matchups for the quarterfinal round of the 2009 FCS playoffs and other selected games. All games are in EST.

SATURDAY'S PLAYOFF GAMES

No. 6 William & Mary (10-1) at No. 1 Southern Illinois (11-1), 12 p.m.

Two teams that have never played will meet for the first time in the quarterfinal round of the 2009 FCS playoffs.

This is Southern Illinois' fourth quarterfinal appearance in five seasons and first second-round berth for William & Mary since 2004.

No. 3 seeded and Missouri Valley Football Conference champion Southern Illinois blew out Eastern Illinois 48-7 in the first round last weekend.

The Salukis outgained the Panthers 389-189, with 2009 Payton Award finalist Deji Karim (1,667 yards rushing, 18 TDs) running for 155 yards and two scores, including a 58-yarder in the fourth quarter.

Karim ranks second nationally in rushing, is tied for second in scoring and is third in all-purpose yardage (2,234 yards). His 2009 rushing total ranks third in SIU history.

Freshman quarterback Paul McIntosh (1,341 yards of total offense, 13 TDs) compiled 181 yards and three scores against EIU and has filled in nicely for Chris Dieker, who is out for at least one more game after suffering a broken left clavicle earlier in the season. McIntosh's 115 yards rushing against the Panthers was a career-high.

Joe Allaria (50 catches, 13.4 average, three TDs) leads SIU's wide receiving corps that also features Bryce Morris (37 catches, 11.2 average, two TDs). The duo didn't produce a lot in the opening round game, because of the success of a rushing attack that racked up 323 yards.

Southern Illinois ranks eighth nationally in scoring defense and seventh in sacks allowed. The unit played extremely well against the Panthers, holding EIU to just seven points and under 200 yards of total offense.

The Salukis' defense features Buchanan Award nominee Brandin Jordan (76 tackles, 7.5 tackles for loss, seven quarterback hurries) and Kyle Walker (40 tackles, 9.5 tackles for loss, six quarterback hurries) at linebacker and All- American Korey Lindsey (58 tackles, six interceptions) at cornerback.

SIU leads the nation in kickoff returns, with Karim (32.9 average, one TD) carrying the effort.

William & Mary, an at-large selection from the Colonial Athletic Association shut out Weber State in the first round, 38-0 to advance. The offense outgained a very solid Wildcats' unit 408-161, with All-CAA running back Jonathan Grimes (1,102 yards rushing, six TDs) compiling 139 yards rushing on 23 carries.

All-CAA Tribe quarterback R.J. Archer (2,585 yards of total offense, 20 TDs) racked up 216 yards of total offense and two rushing scores in the win. It was the first time Archer had rushed for more than one touchdown in a game since facing Villanova in October of last season.

Archer's top receivers include D.J. McAulay (45 catches, 11.3 average, three TDs), Chase Hill (31 catches, 13.8 average, four TDs) and tight end Rob Varno (42 catches, 9.5 average, three TDs).

William & Mary's defense rank No. 1 FCS in fewest rushing yards allowed, is second in total defense and fourth in sacks. The unit showed its dominance against the Wildcats, shutting out a WSU offense that hadn't been held to zero points all season.

Buchanan Award nominee Adrian Tracy (68 tackles, 20 tackles for loss, 10 sacks), defensive tackle Sean Lissemore (63 tackles, 12.5 tackles for loss) and CAA defensive rookie of the year, cornerback B.W. Webb (21 tackles, seven interceptions, two TDs) lead this stingy Tribe defense. Webb had two picks and returned one 58 yards for a touchdown against Weber State.

Both defenses have held their own all season, making this matchup about which offense can be most effective. But William & Mary's offensive balance with Archer could tip the game the Tribe's way.

WILLIAM & MARY 24, SOUTHERN ILLINOIS 14


No. 12 Stephen F. Austin (10-2) at No. 3 Montana (12-0), 2:05 p.m.

Montana has beaten Stephen F. Austin in the only three times they've played and will have a chance to advance to the semifinals of the 2009 FCS playoffs for second straight season.

The last time these squads got together was in 1998, in a 49-42 Grizzlies win at SFA. Montana would head to the playoffs that season, only to fall to Western Illinois, 52-9 in the first round.

There was also a 1995 semifinal playoff encounter, where the Grizzlies dominated the Lumberjacks 70-14 in Missoula, MT., on the way to Montana's first national championship.

The top-seeded Grizzlies recovered from one of the biggest deficits in FCS playoff history last week, scoring 34 points in the fourth quarter to beat South Dakota State, 61-48. Montana looked dreadful early in game, falling behind 41-14 and 48-27 before making its comeback.

Montana's offensive explosion in the fourth quarter was paced by quarterback Andrew Selle (2,250 yards passing, 21 TDs, five interceptions), who tossed two touchdown passes in the final frame, finishing the game with 309 yards passing, three touchdown passes and two interceptions. Selle ranks sixth nationally in passing efficiency.

Running back Chase Reynolds (1,193 yards rushing, 18 TDs) was limited in yardage (34 yards), but found the end zone three times, twice in the fourth quarter.

Grizzly All-American wide receiver Marc Mariani (62 catches, 18.6 average, 11 TDs) was the sparkplug for the historical comeback, racking up 389 all- purpose yards and three scores, including a 98-yard kickoff return near the end of the third quarter. Mariani ranks fourth nationally in punt returns (16.3 average) and 11th in all-purpose yards (1,823 yards).

Mariani is joined in the Montana receiving group by senior Tyler Palmer (34 catches, 12.9 average, four TDs).

Montana's defense has been its Achilles heel this season, although the unit had held opponents to under 20 points in the previous four games before the playoffs. However, the defense was put under pressure by SDSU's rushing attack for much of the afternoon.

The Grizzly defense features linebacker Shawn Lebsock (82 tackles), cornerback Andrew Swink (25 tackles, interceptions) and defensive end Jace Palmer (32 tackles, nine tackles for loss, six pass breakups).

SFA earned its first playoff win since 1995 by winning a share of the Southland Conference title and the automatic bid. The Lumberjacks took down Eastern Washington, 44-33, at home in the first round.

The nation's top-ranked scoring offense and second-ranked scoring offense put up 563 yards of total offense, with Payton Award nominee Jeremy Moses (3,920 yards passing, 40 TDs) throwing for 432 yards and four touchdown passes.

Moses spread the ball around to nine different receivers, with Duane Brooks (110 catches, 9.3 average, six TDs), Gralyn Crawford (47 catches, 15.3 average, seven TDs) and Brandon Scott (24 catches, 11.4 average, five TDs) leading the effort. The three combined for 30 catches, 302 yards and three scores.

Wide receiver Aaron Rhea (54 catches, 13.8 average, 11 TDs) missed his second straight game with an ankle injury, but is expected to play this weekend along with Contrevious Parks (45 catches, 10.3 average, five TDs), who also missed the EWU game due to injury.

The Lumberjacks' rushing attack takes a back seat to the air attack, but Vincent Pervis (872 yards rushing, two TDs) played well against the Eagles, compiling 177 all-purpose yards in the win.

SFA's defense struggled against Eastern Washington, allowing a blistering 595 yards of total offense and 33 points, its most this season.

The unit features Buchanan Award nominee Tim Knicky (37 tackles, 15 tackles for loss) at defensive end, All-American linebacker Jabara Williams (102 tackles, eight tackles for loss, seven pass breakups) and defensive tackle Kenneth Charles (43 tackles, 11 tackles for loss, nine sacks).

Both teams are clearly explosive on offense, but the lack of SFA's rushing attack could provide a disadvantage for the Lumberjacks.

MONTANA 44, STEPHEN F. AUSTIN 34


No. 10 New Hampshire (10-2) at No. 2 Villanova (11-1), 3:30 p.m.

Villanova and New Hampshire will meet in a rematch from the regular season in the quarterfinal round of the 2009 FCS playoffs.

UNH handed Villanova its lone loss this season, taking down the VU Wildcats 28-24. On an extremely windy day at UNH's Cowell Stadium, New Hampshire took advantage of VU's miscues to build a 23-7 first-half lead, fell behind 24-23 and then won it on a pair of Tom Manning field goals in the fourth quarter.

Quarterback R.J. Toman completed 15-of-28 passes for 292 yards and tight end Scott Sicko caught three passes for 135 yards and a 32-yard touchdown for New Hampshire.

Villanova, however, won the last time the teams played in the Philadelphia area, 24-13 last season behind 222 rushing yards overall and 150 yards of total offense from quarterback Chris Whitney.

New Hampshire is making its second straight quarterfinal appearance and third in the past four seasons, but the team has never advanced to the semifinals in seven previous FCS postseason appearances. Last season, UNH fell to Northern Iowa, 36-34 in the second round.

New Hampshire took down McNeese State, 49-13 to advance last week. The nation's ninth-ranked scoring offense racked up 460 yards of total offense, with Toman (2,135 yards of total offense, 19 TDs) throwing for 204 yards and scoring a season-high four times.

UNH's rushing attack ranks 37th in FCS and compiled 183 yards against the Cowboys. Running back Chad Kackert (790 yards rushing, 10 TDs) leads the attack and carried 14 times for 63 yards and a score against MSU.

Sicko (53 catches, 13.1 average, nine TDs) is the team's best receiver and hauled in two Toman touchdown passes against the Cowboys. Wide receiver J.T. Wright (34 catches, 11.4 average) is another capable pass catcher for New Hampshire.

UNH's defense got off to a very strong start in 2009, but fell off late, surrendering 42 points to a poor Rhode Island team. The looked to get back to form, surrendering just 326 yards against a formidable McNeese State offense.

New Hampshire's defense features linebackers Devon Jackson (97 tackles, eight tackles for loss), Sean Ware (93 tackles, 5.5 tackles for loss) and Terrence Klein (75 tackles, 8.5 tackles for loss, six interceptions) and All-CAA cornerback Dino Vasso (70 tackles, six pass breakups, five interceptions).

Villanova, the No. 2 seed and the auto-bid winner from the CAA, took care of business against Holy Cross, 38-28 to advance to its second straight quarterfinal round.

CAA offensive player of the year Matt Szczur (1,716 combined yards, 13 TDs) led the offensive effort, compiling 238 all-purpose yards and a touchdown run. Szczur ranks fourth nationally in kickoff returns, averaging 27.3 yards and is always a threat to break one.

Whitney (2,442 yards of total offense, 21 TDs, three interceptions), the first-team All-CAA quarterback, has been solid all season for Villanova's versatile offense which ranks 14th nationally in scoring.

Running back Aaron Ball (662 yards rushing, six TDs) racked up 99 yards and a touchdown against the Crusaders and is the team's leading running back. Finally healthy after battling with a turf toe most of the season, Angelo Babbaro (237 yards rushing, four TDs) is another rushing threat and ran for 75 yards and a touchdown in the first round win.

Wide receiver Brandyn Harvey (50 catches, 12.6 average, five TDs) poses a size advantage in Villanova's receiving corps, but has hauled in just seven balls in his last three games.

Villanova's defense settled down after the first quarter against Holy Cross and started pressuring quarterback Dominic Randolph. After surrendering 14 points to the high-octane offense in the first quarter, the defense kept Holy Cross' offense to just 14 points in the final three frames.

Buchanan Award nominee Tim Kukucka (51 tackles, 14.5 tackles for loss) paces Villanova's defense, with help from fellow linebackers Terence Thomas (97 tackles, 8.5 tackles for loss) and Osayi Osunde (74 tackles, seven tackles for loss) and safeties Ross Ventrone (62 tackles, five pass breakups) and John Dempsey (59 tackles, 8.5 tackles for loss).

Villanova could be the most well-balanced team in FCS this season and with the decline of UNH's defense, should be able to make its first semifinal appearance since 2002.

VILLANOVA 28, NEW HAMPSHIRE 20


No. 5 Appalachian State (10-2) at No. 4 Richmond (11-1), 7 p.m.

Richmond and Appalachian State meet in a rematch of last season's quarterfinals in the 2009 FCS playoffs.

The Spiders went on to win the 2008 national championship after taking down the Mountaineers, 33-13, ending an FCS-record, 13-game playoff winning streak against the three-time champs.

Richmond took advantage of hip and knee injuries to ASU quarterback Armanti Edwards (26-of-41, 323 yards, one TD, five interceptions passing) to force seven Mountaineer turnovers. Josh Vaughan rushed 32 times for 133 yards and three TDs for the Spiders.

In the previous playoff meeting in the 2007 semifinals, Edwards rushed for 313 yards and four TDs and passed for 182 yards and three more scores as ASU won 55-35.

Richmond, the No. 4 seed, beat Elon, 16-13 last week to advance to the quarterfinals. The Spiders survived when the Phoenix missed a pair of field goals from 27 and 48 yards in the final two minutes. Parker Miles partially blocked the 48-yard attempt on the final play of the game, forcing the attempt to come up short.

The Spiders' offense compiled an impressive 400 yards of total offense, with third-team All-CAA quarterback Eric Ward (2,503 yards of total offense, 19 TDs, 10 interceptions) registering 276 total yards and a 76-yard touchdown run. The senior's 136 yards rushing in the contest was a career-high.

Running back Justin Forte (999 yards rushing, six TDs) adds to Richmond's 32nd-ranked rushing attack and ran for 96 yards against the Phoenix.

A strong group of wide receivers, led by Tre Gray (46 catches, 13.5 average, three TDs), Kevin Grayson (44 catches, 11.2 average, two TDs) and Donte Boston (32 catches, 15.3 average, four TDs), gives Ward some reliable targets.

Defensively, Richmond has been one of the best teams in FCS the past two seasons. The unit ranks seventh nationally in scoring defense and 14th in total defense.

The Spiders' defense hasn't surrendered more than 21 points in eight straight games and features standouts Buchanan Award nominee Martin Parker (71 tackles, 15.5 tackles for loss, eight quarterback hurries) at defensive end, linebackers Collin McConaghy (89 tackles) and Eric McBride (84 tackles) and All-American cornerback Justin Rogers (eight pass breakups, three interceptions).

Appalachian State escaped with a 20-13 win over South Carolina State, in a game littered with turnovers. ASU's third-ranked total offense was limited to just 302 yards and one offensive touchdown.

The Mountaineers scored the game-winning touchdown on a botched SCSU field goal attempt in which the snap when over the holder's head, allowing Dominique McDuffie to pick up the loose ball and take it 50 yards to the end zone.

Armanti Edwards (3,296 yards of total offense, 27 TDs, six interceptions tossed a season-high three interceptions and was caught off-guard by the SCSU pass rush most of the afternoon. Edwards is still recovering from a slight ACL sprain that he suffered against Elon, but the senior is expected to be near 100% this weekend.

Running back Devon Moore (1,115 yards rushing, 15 TDs) was limited to just 61 yards on 20 carries against Elon and was slightly banged up, but is expected to start this weekend. ASU's 10th-ranked rushing attack was limited to just 84 yards.

Wide receivers Brian Quick (49 catches, 16.7 average, four TDs) and Matt Cline (69 catches, 11.5 average) have paced ASU's talented group since slot receiver-returnman CoCo Hillary (4,100 combined yards for his career) underwent season-ending knee surgery. Quick had an acrobatic touchdown catch in the win.

Appalachian State's defense has significantly improved over the course of the season and has given up just 10 offensive points per game in the past three contests.

The unit is littered with talent in 2008 Buchanan Award finalist Mark LeGree (63 tackles, seven interceptions) at safety and All-Americans, cornerback Cortez Gilbert (68 tackles) and linebackers D.J. Smith (113 tackles, 11 tackles for loss, seven quarterback hurries) and Jacque Roman (93 tackles).

This game hinges on Edwards' health. If he is mobile and can both run and throw it will keep the Richmond defense honest and ASU should prevail.

APPALACHIAN STATE 27, RICHMOND 21

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Tony Samuel Will Return For 2010 Season

No big surprise coming from Southeast Missouri State...Just got the official word SEMO football coach Tony Samuel will return for (at least) the fifth and final year of his contract.

Samuel finished the season, on a bit of a high note, hanging with the top ranked Southern Illinios Salukis at Houck stadium for most of the afternoon. SEMO did lose 42-24 but showed passion and never gave up.

Samuel's record at SEMO has been anything but impressive (13-32) which lead many to speculate he would not return. Bringing him back to finish out his current contract is the right move. The University does not need another negative public relations hit (the men's and women's basketball programs stole that spotlight).

The economic ramifications have to be taken into consideration as well. As the economy sits on shaky ground it does not make much sense to pay a coach to go away.

Honestly, would it be the end of the world if the Redhawks roll thorough another losing season in 2010? It's not like there are a lot of expectations placed on the football program to be a winner. If it happens...great. If not..oh well.

SEMO Football under Tony Samuel:

Year W-L OVC Record OVC Finish
2009 2-9 (1-7 OVC) 8th*
2008 4-8 (2-6 OVC) 7th
2007 3-8 (1-6 OVC) 9th
2006 4-7 (2-6 OVC) 7th

*SEMO finished 8th because Jacksonville State was ineligible for OVC Championship.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Kent Williams, Tom Koutsos Saluki Hall-Of-Famer's

If you were lucky enough to watch former SIU Salukis Kent Williams and Tom Koutsos, you may not have realized it then but, you were watching future Sauki Hall-of-Famers.

From 1999-to-2003 the Mt. Vernon native helped rebuild the basketball program into one of the more dominant mid-major schools in the country.

Williams started all four years finishing with an 88-42 record and leading the team to two NCAA Tournaments (2002 and 2003).

The '03 team knocked off Texas Tech and Georgia but lost to Uconn in the Sweet 16.

Willams is only the second player in school history with more than 2,000 career points.

Kent is still in the Missouri Valley Conference. He's entering his second year as an assistant men's basketball coach at Missouri State.

Running back Tom Koutsos helped lead a resurgence in the football program racking up three 1,000-yard seasons -- the most by any back in school history -- and finished as SIU's career rushing leader with 4,715 yards. That mark still ranks second all-time in conference history.

Nicknamed Touchdown Tommy - Koutsos is the schools career leader with 52 td's, rushing attempts with 988 and 100 yard games with 22.

He helped get the Salukis into the playoffs his senior year ending a 20 year drought.

The program has now made seven consecutive trips to the postseason.

Also set to be inducted:
  • Hoops standout Jerry Jones (1988-1990).
  • Pitcher Al Levine - a Saluki from 1990-1991 and pitched for nine big league teams including the Cardinals, Royals and White Sox.
  • Volleyball star Dana Olden (1989-1992)
  • Shortstop Cheryl Venorsky (1989-1992)

Jackson's Grant Ressel Honored By Big XII

Former Jackson, MO kicker Grant Ressel is honored today as the Big XII's special teams player of the week.

Ressel was deadly accurate in Saturday nights 41-39 come-from-behind win over rival Kansas.... going four for four on field goals (43, 28, 37 and 27 yards).

The sophomore kicker won the job during preseason drills and took advantage of then opportunity missing only one of his 25 field goal attempts while nailing all 38-extra points.

He leads the big 12 and ranks third in the NCAA with an average of two field goals a game.

Ressel is a Semi-Finalist for the the Lou Groza Award given to the Nations top kicker. The award will be handed out December 10th.