Box Score
By: Steve Wieberg
KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Down two touchdowns to the
nation's top-ranked team, the game and perhaps its season teetering, Northwest
Missouri State delivered a response fitting of its championship pedigree
Saturday.
Quarterback Trevor Adams threw for two
touchdowns, James Franklin ran for two more and the defense stepped up with a
succession of big second-half plays as the Bearcats defeated Mid-America
Intercollegiate Athletics Association rival Pittsburg State 31-21 in their
annual Fall Classic in Kansas City's Arrowhead Stadium.
"Our program's had a lot of big wins . . . and
this certainly is a big one," coach Adam Dorrel said after his team preserved
both its league title hopes and run at a ninth consecutive Division II playoff
berth. Now 6-1 overall and 5-1 in the rugged MIAA, Northwest might not have
been able to afford another loss on either front.
The showdown against Pitt State kicked off a
five-game closing stretch that's the most challenging in college football – not
only in D-II but across every one of the NCAA's four competitive
classifications, based on the records of their remaining opponents. Immediately
ahead is a trip Saturday to Missouri Southern, 5-2 and an upset winner over
Missouri Western earlier Saturday.
The Bearcats move on with noticeable head of
steam.
Against Pitt State (5-1), they struggled first
with the weather – persistent rain and two lightning delays, the second
stopping play for 30 minutes early in the game – and then for a little more
than a half with both the Gorillas' defense and pass-minded offense. They
trailed 7-0 at the half, then 14-0 when PSU's Anthony Abenoja hit Luke Rampy
with a 14-yard TD pass on the opening series of the second half.
"We knew we had to respond quick," Adams said.
The 6-1 junior did just that, completing the
first nine passes he threw in the third quarter. The first five produced
Northwest's first score, a 19-yard touchdown toss to Jordan Simmons that cut
the deficit to 14-7. The next offensive series set up a 31-yard field goal by
Todd Adolf.
It was the start of a game-turning run of 31
answered points by the Bearcats.
"Momentum kind of shifted their way," Pitt State
coach Tim Beck said. "We couldn't get it stopped. Both sides of the ball. They
were very, very good on both sides, and we didn't respond very well."
The Gorillas did stir at one critical point,
moving to the Northwest 17-yard line in the opening moments of the fourth
quarter. There, on fourth-on-1, Beck opted against a field goal and ran 6-3,
238-pound Mandell Dixon into the middle of the Bearcats' line. There, he was met
and stopped for no gain by linebacker Matt Massey and nose guard Travis
Chappelear.
The stops kept coming. Travis Manning picked off
a pass and returned it 14 yards to the Pitt State 35, and Adams and the offense
capitalized. On a gutsy fourth-and-4 call, receiver John Hinchey beat one PSU
defender on an inside slant and Adams hit him perfectly. Hinchey leapfrogged
another defensive back en route to a 29-yard touchdown that put Northwest up
17-14.
The Gorillas' next possession ended on a sack by
Northwest linebacker Eric Reimer. Franklin followed with the first of his TD
runs, this one three yards around left end, to make it 24-14 with 5:06
remaining.
Safety Nate DeJong came up with another
interception, and Franklin added a clinching 14-yard scoring run just 21
seconds later.
Franklin finished with 115 yards rushing on 20
carries. Adams threw for a total of 192
yards, completing 17 of 30 passes and overcoming a couple of first-half
interceptions.
Dorrel, who came up with signature
come-from-behind wins against Missouri Western and Midwestern State in last
year's playoffs, now has another in his second season as coach. He pointed to
Hinchey, Massey, DeJong and the rest of the Bearcats' veterans.
"In a game like that, in my opinion, it's not
about play-calling. I believe that," Dorrel said. "I believe it's about guys, a
group of seniors, who willed it to happen.
"They believed in their coaches, and they
believed in each other. It was awesome to hear them say at halftime when we
were coming out, 'We've got to keep playing for each other.' And they played
for each other today."
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  Steve Wieberg wrapped up a nearly 30-year
career with USA TODAY in July. A native Missourian who lives just outside the
Kansas City area, he was part of the national newspaper's original startup
staff in 1982 and focused his coverage on college football and basketball and
NCAA issues. He also worked eight summer and winter Olympics.
  Wieberg is a longtime member of the Football
Writers Association of America and an inductee into U.S. Basketball Writers
Association Hall of Fame. His work has earned more than two dozen national
writing awards.
   In October 2007, he was named by The
Chronicle of Higher Education as one of the "10 Most Powerful People in
College Sports."