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Ohio St. Student Who Ran on Turf Loses Scholarship

Ohio State Fan SlamCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A student who ran onto the field during an Ohio State football game and was body-slammed by a coach is losing his scholarship amid his court case.

Defense attorney Mark Collins says officials on Tuesday started removing 21-year-old Anthony Wunder from the Evans Scholars program, which covers tuition and housing for former golf caddies.

The fourth-year engineering student is charged with misdemeanor criminal trespassing. His attorney entered a not-guilty plea in Franklin County Municipal Court.

Wunder was stopped and slammed down by an assistant strength and conditioning coach Saturday during Ohio State’s home victory over Cincinnati. The coach, Anthony Schlegel, is a former Buckeyes linebacker.

The hit has been a sensation on social media.

Coach Urban Meyer said he had a somewhat serious conversation with Schlegel about the hit.

Developmental League Hooks Up with ESPN

FXFL LogoNEW YORK (AP) — The new FXFL developmental league has signed a deal with ESPN to have its games broadcast online and through the ESPN app.

The league begins play with four teams next Wednesday when Boston plays at Omaha. Commissioner Brian Woods calls having ESPN involved with its Game of the Week broadcasts “very exciting and important.”

Another teams is located in Brooklyn, and the fourth, called the Blacktips, will play all road games in 2014..

Woods already lined up regional television platforms for the prime-time games, most of which will be played on Wednesdays, but some on Fridays. Woods says that the league can reach more than 99 million homes through the affiliation with ESPN.

The Fall Experimental Football League is designed as a home for players who didn’t make it into the NFL, but are seeking another shot. Rosters will have less than 40 players on game days.

McIlroy wins PGA Tour Player of the Year

Rory McIlroy
Rory McIlroy

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP) — Rory McIlroy has been voted the PGA Tour player of the year for the second time in three years.

The award was announced on Wednesday and surprised no one.

McIlroy hit his stride in the summer and won the British Open and the PGA Championship, with a World Golf Championship in between. Those three straight wins catapulted him to No. 1 in the world.

McIlroy finished the PGA Tour season with three wins. He also led the tour with 12 finishes in the top 10, and he never finished worse than 25th. McIlroy also won the PGA Tour money title with $8.2 million, and he won the Vardon Trophy for the lowest adjusted scoring average.

Chesson Hadley was voted as the rookie of the year.

Hershey’s Dethlefs an NSAA Believer and Achiever

NSAALINCOLN – U.S. Bank® and the Nebraska School Activities Association (NSAA) are
proud to announce the 2014-15 Believers and Achievers. Believers & Achievers is a
state-wide program designed by U.S. Bank and the NSAA to give recognition to
Nebraska’s future leaders.
Starting in October and continuing through May, 48 Nebraska high school seniors will be
honored as Believers & Achievers. From those 48 finalists, eight will receive $500
scholarships from U.S. Bank to the college or university of their choice.
On the next page you will find a list of the 2014-15 recipients of this prestigious award.
These students will be recognized at NSAA State Championships throughout the year
2014-15 activities year and on bi-monthly posters sent to all NSAA member schools and
U.S. Bank® branches throughout the state.
All of the students nominated for the Believers & Achievers awards program represent
the very best of Nebraska’s high schools. This year, the NSAA and U.S. Bank received
437 nominees from NSAA member schools. This resulted in a 16% increase is overall
applications, with approximately 79% of all NSAA member schools submitting at least
one student for the award.

2014-15 NSAA/U.S. Bank® Believers & Achievers
Student Winner High School
Kristen Bell Aurora
Chauncey Kleveland Beatrice
Chase Crispin Blair
Mariah Fehringer Bloomfield
Toree Hempstead Columbus
Monica Gotschall Columbus Lakeview
Abby Steffen Crofton
Nathan Klaumann Fairbury
Conrad Schelkopf Fillmore Central
Johnathon Boyd Gering
Irvin Ramirez-Benavides Grand Island
Christian Hadden Gretna
Anna Brodersen Hartington Cedar Catholic
Andrew Fanning Hastings St. Cecilia
Emily Dethlefs Hershey
Jared Martin Humphrey
Michael Purcell Johnson County
Colten White Kearney
Moriah Heerten Keya Paha County
McKenzie Currey Lincoln North Star
Jamie Holscher Lincoln Northeast
Gus Mattern Lincoln Pius X
Brooke Moore Maywood
Ruchika Khot Millard West
Matt Extrom Minden
Adam Starr Mullen
Marshall DeFor Norfolk
Geena Piper Norfolk Catholic
Payton Ruhl Norris
Randy Rouse Omaha Benson
Luke Doyle Omaha Bryan
Matthew Herting Omaha Gross Catholic
Madison Sutula Omaha North
Rachel Wieseman Osceola
Justin Hodgson Overton
Trevor Polivka Parkview Christian
Claire Gause Ralston
Wyatt Bell Red Cloud
Brandy Herley Riverside
Jennefer Lopez Schuyler
Kyra Willats Scottsbluff
Angel Roth Seward
Sara Von Seggern Sidney
Anna Hubbard South Sioux City
Rachael Cole Southern
Aaron Halvorsen Syracuse
Emalee Kasperbauer Wheeler Central
Victoria Doffin Winside

Royals Return to Playoffs in Dramatic Fashion

kc-royalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — It had been 29 years since the Kansas City Royals had last been to the postseason — nearly three decades spent mostly in baseball’s backwater, a small-market organization on a shoe-string budget trying in vain to compete with the big boys.

On Tuesday night, they returned to the game’s grand stage in dramatic fashion.

Salvador Perez singled home the winning run with two outs in the 12th inning, capping two late comebacks that gave Kansas City a thrilling 9-8 victory over the Oakland Athletics and sent the Royals to a best-of-five Division Series against the Los Angeles Angels.

The Royals will meet the AL West champions in the opener on Thursday in Los Angeles.

“We’re going to enjoy this one,” said Eric Hosmer, drenched in champagne, who sparked the final Royals rally with a one-out triple. “We realize we’re playing a team that had the best record in baseball, but it’s a five-game series and anything can happen.”

After Tuesday night, there is no disputing that.

Making their first postseason appearance since winning the 1985 World Series, the Royals fell behind by four runs, only to race back with their speed on the bases — they led the majors with 153 steals this season. Kansas City swiped seven in this one to tie a postseason record shared by the 1907 Chicago Cubs and 1975 Cincinnati Reds, according to STATS.

The biggest one came in the 12th.

Hosmer scored the tying run on a high chopper to third by rookie Christian Colon, who reached on the infield single and then stole second with two outs.

Perez, who was 0 for 5 after squandering two late chances to drive in key runs, reached out and pulled a hard one-hopper past diving third baseman Josh Donaldson. Colon scored easily, and the Royals rushed out of the dugout for a mad celebration.

Sitting upstairs in a suite, Royals Hall of Famer George Brett put his hands on his head in near disbelief at the frenzied and jubilant scene that was unfolding below.

“It was unbelievable,” Perez said.

So unbelievable that the Kansas City Police took to Twitter with a message for folks across the city, and it was hard to believe that anybody disobeyed the request: “We really need everyone to not commit crimes and drive safely right now. We’d like to hear the Royals clinch.”

Royals manager Ned Yost has refused to discuss who he might pitch in the opener against the Angels. The two best bets are vastly different options: Danny Duffy is a young, hard-throwing lefty who plays on passion. Jeremy Guthrie is a cerebral right-hander who relies on guile.

For the A’s, it was a stunning and heartbreaking finish. They had the best record in baseball before collapsing in the second half, and needed a victory on the final day of the regular season just to squeeze into the playoffs.

Oakland had chances to put all that in the past. Instead, the season ended abruptly for a team that has failed over and over again in the postseason.

“It’s a one-game deal. You know coming in that anything can happen,” said Brandon Moss, who drove in five runs with two homers for Oakland. “I don’t think many of us will go over things in our head very much at all. We may re-watch it but I wouldn’t second-guess anything we did or they did. Both teams went out, put some pressure on the other team, played good baseball.”

Even Yost, who rarely cracks a smile, had to grin after this one.

“That’s the most incredible game I’ve ever been a part of,” he said. “Our guys never quit. We fell behind there in the fifth inning, sixth inning. They kept battling back. They weren’t going to be denied. It was just a great game.”

A much-anticipated pitching showdown between Oakland ace Jon Lester and Kansas City counterpart James Shields instead turned into a high-scoring game and a battle of attrition between bullpens.

That seemed to be just fine with the two starting pitchers, who watched in rapt attention after they exited the game as the innings ticked by and midnight approached.

“It was awesome to be a part of,” Lester said. “Loud, good atmosphere, just a good baseball game. The fans, the teams, the competitiveness, the will to not lose. Obviously, we’re on the bad side at the end but you couldn’t ask for a better game for a one-game, play-in game.”

Or, in the words of Shields, “It was absolutely epic. You don’t write a story like that.”

NU Defense Ready for Cook, Spartans

nebraska_helmetLincoln, Neb. – The Nebraska football team continued its preparations for its Big Ten battle Saturday night with the Michigan State Spartans, as the Huskers conducted a 1-hour and 50-minute practice Tuesday afternoon in full pads inside of the Hawks Championship Center. Nebraska will travel to East Lansing for its first conference road game against the defending Big Ten champions.

Defensive coordinator John Papuchis met with media members after practice, noting the challenges of the Spartan offense including quarterback Connor Cook who has thrown for 837 yards, while completing 69 percent of his passes this season.

“He is actually a lot more athletic than people would give him credit for,” Papuchis said. “What he does a great job of is buying time for himself in the pocket. His mobility doesn’t always translate to rushing yards. But what he is able to do is give ground, avoid pass rush and feel the pocket and step up in it. That he does a really good job of.”

Papuchis added Cook has many great targets in receivers Tony Lippett, R.J. Shelton and tight end Josiah Price. He spoke of their different style, size and physical ability.

“They are big guys, really the same guys we have been playing for a couple years now. Our biggest thing is we have to get our hands on them. If we are physical with them and match their physicality then I think we have a chance. If we allow them to run free down the field and box us out all of the time, then we are going to have some issues,” Papuchis said. “We will have to be good in our technique we will have to execute our fundamentals and we will have a chance to be good.”

When asked what he thinks of the defensive line, Papuchis said they have grown tremendously in the first few weeks and will continue to do so in Big Ten play.

“I think the biggest measuring stick is how efficient we have been in terms of running between the tackles. We have gotten considerably better against the run, but I feel a big part of that is there has been very few successful runs in between the tackles. That is credit to Maliek, Vincent, Kevin Maurice and Kevin Williams,” Papuchis said.

The Huskers will hit the practice field again on Wednesday as the team moves closer to its second conference game of the season. NU will face Michigan State on Saturday at 7 p.m. CT. The game will be broadcast nationally on ABC. Check back here or at Huskers.com for updates.

Chiefs Place RB McKnight on Injured Reserve

Kansas City Chiefs LogoKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs have created space on their roster for the return of right tackle Donald Stephenson by placing running back Joe McKnight on injured reserve.

McKnight became the third Chiefs player to tear his Achilles tendon when he was hurt in practice last week. He was coming off a two-touchdown game in a win in Miami.

Stephenson was suspended for the first four games of the regular season for violating the NFL’s policy on performance-enhancing substances. That suspension ended with Monday night’s 41-14 victory over the New England Patriots.

Chiefs coach Andy Reid said earlier Tuesday that he would wait to see Stephenson practice on Wednesday before he begins to decide whether he’ll go back in the starting lineup.

Brain Injury Group: Concussion Award Scheme Flawed

nfl_logo2011-medPHILADELPHIA (AP) — A national brain injury group says the proposed payout scheme for NFL concussion-related injuries is “deeply flawed.”

The Brain Injury Association of America says it believes the proposed awards favor retired players with memory and neuromuscular problems. The group says it excludes former players battling mood swings, aggression and many other problems.

The group’s Tuesday court filing seeks the right to weigh in when a federal judge in Philadelphia reviews the settlement plan in November.

The NFL has agreed to provide at least $675 million over 65 years to ex-players diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, dementia and other serious neurocognitive problems. The total settlement, including research and medical testing, is $765 million.

Lead players’ lawyer Christopher Seeger calls the agreement “an extraordinary settlement for retired NFL players and their families.”

Big Ten West Teams Step Up

Big-Ten-LogoDES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — One of the prevailing notions heading into the season was that the Big Ten East could end up being a lot better than the West.

It didn’t look that way last weekend.

Northwestern buried Penn State as road underdogs.

Minnesota did the same to Michigan in Ann Arbor.

Nebraska continued its unbeaten start with a rout of Illinois, and Iowa won its second straight road game.

Though it was clearly a small sample size, Saturday’s performances were encouraging for a newly-created division fighting for respect.

Michigan St, Nebraska have Gaudy Offensive Numbers

nebraska_helmetEAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) — No. 10 Michigan State is off to a historic start on offense and faces another high-scoring team in No. 19 Nebraska to open Big Ten play on Saturday night.

Michigan State (3-1) has scored 201 points through four games, best in school history. The Cornhuskers (5-0, 1-0 Big Ten) are averaging 45.4 points per game.

It’s an interesting dynamic considering Spartans coach Mark Dantonio and Nebraska coach Bo Pelini are former defensive coordinators.

Dantonio said Tuesday that high-scoring games don’t seem unusual anymore in this day and age.

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