Box Score
By: Steve Wieberg
JOPLIN – With the NCAA's first regional rankings due in a
couple of days and a Division II playoff race beginning to warm, this was no
time for a letdown.
And no way was it the place.
Northwest Missouri State hasn't lost in Missouri Southern's
Fred Hughes Stadium – hasn't fallen to the Lions anywhere – since 1994, tying
the longest chokehold it has put on any Mid-America Athletic Association rival.
Saturday was more of the same. The Bearcats got a precisioned passing
performance from quarterback Trevor Adams and three rushing touchdowns from
James Franklin, put the triple-option-running Lions in an early 14-point hole
and rolled to a 38-14 victory.
They've won the last six games in the two schools' series by
an average of more than 31 points.
There was no visible hangover from an emotional win a week
earlier over then-unbeaten and top-ranked Pittsburg State. While Adams and the
offense scored on four of their first five possessions, the defense bent a
little against Southern's triple option – allowing a season-high 253 yards on
the ground – but harassed Lions quarterback Kellen Cox into an 0-for-11 passing
day, intercepting him twice.
"When they did try to
throw, our D-line was in the backfield causing havoc," said senior safety Nate
DeJong, whose first-quarter interception set up the first Northwest score. "He
was kind of running for his life."
DeJong and the Bearcats (7-1 overall, 6-1 in the MIAA)
continued their push for an eighth berth in the Division II playoffs in as many
years.
They have little room for error in either the conference or
the NCAA's power-packed Super Region 3, which accounted for 11 of the top 25
teams in the coaches' poll going into Saturday. Northwest travels next weekend
to Washburn, then closes its regular season with games at home vs. Emporia
State and Missouri Western.
Those three remaining opponents are a combined 22-2.
With much of the meat of his team's schedule ahead,
Northwest coach Adam Dorrel isn't counting on a lofty initial ranking. "We're
not going to be in the top six," he said. ". . . But the approach I think I'll
end up taking is: Don't worry about it. If you do what you're supposed to do,
it'll all work out in the
end.
"I'll just tell our
team, 'Guys, we've never not made the playoffs when we were supposed to.' "
Missouri Southern (5-3, 4-3) was coming off its own
eye-opening victory, a 31-30 upset of Missouri Western in St. Joseph. But this
one got away from the Lions – or rather was taken away – quickly.
Scouts from the NFL's New York Giants and Seattle Seahawks
were on hand to get a look at Southern's two-time All-American tackle and NFL
draft pick-in-waiting, Brandon Williams. What they got instead was an early
eyeful of Adams who completed 19 of his first 23 passes for 226 yards and a TD
– all before the end of the first half.
He finished 25-for-33 for 292 yards.
Southern's Cox, a 5-10 senior converted from receiver this
season, had a very different kind of afternoon. His very first pass was picked
off by DeJong, setting the Bearcats up at their own 49-yard line. Less than
three minutes later, Franklin ran it in from the 1 for a 7-0 lead.
The Bearcats then added a 12-play, 80-yard drive, Jordan
Simmons finishing it with a two-yard TD run.
"Our offense did an
awesome job of putting them in a hole early," said junior defensive end Ricky
Bailey."An option team like that, they're very time-dependent. They like to run
time off the clock. But when they're in the hole, they can't do that."
Southern ground out a touchdown drive late in the first and
early in the second quarter, cutting the margin to 14-7. But Northwest Missouri
answered with a 12-play, 76-yard drive, Adams hitting tight end Joel Gantz in
the back of the end zone for a three-yard TD.
A 22-yard field goal by Todd Adolf made it 24-7 before
halftime.
The Bearcats put together 76- and 62-yard touchdown drives
in the second half, eating up time that Southern's offense so desperately
needed.
The Lions didn't complete a pass until a little more than
four minutes remained, and that was by freshman backup quarterback Jay
McDowell. For a mere five yards. Their running game, while covering some
ground, also suffered six fumbles – all recovered by Southern but setbacks
nonetheless.
Northwest's lead ballooned to 38-7 before Southern tacked on
a meaningless touchdown with 2:57 left.
"The strength of this
football team is our defense. To get where we want to get, those guys have got
to play like they've played every week," Dorrel said. ". . . (It was) a solid
performance from them again. And I thought it was a gutsy performance.
His team is now three-quarters through a crucial four-week
stretch on the road.
"One of the things we talk about," Dorrel said, "is 'let's
be perfect in October.' I felt like if we could do that, we'd have a chance.
"I'm just so proud of
our kids, the way
they've gone the first three weeks. Now, we've got a tough, tough football game
next week in Topeka."
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."