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K-State holds weekly football press conference prior to Bowling Green game

MANHATTAN, Kan. – Kansas State head coach Chris Klieman and players met with members of the media on Tuesday at the Vanier Family Football Complex as the Wildcats prepare for Saturday’s game against Bowling Green. A complete transcript of Klieman’s press conference (also streamed live on Big 12 Now on ESPN+ andarchived here) are posted below, in addition to select comments from players.

 

The Wildcats and Falcons do battle at 11 a.m., on Saturday at Bill Snyder Family Stadium in a game shown on FSN.

CHRIS KLIEMAN, HEAD COACH

Opening Statement…

“Good afternoon everybody. We’re excited about the win on Saturday. Going back and looking at the film a couple things, I thought the guys played really hard, we played really fast, played with great emotion. Some technique errors and alignment errors we talked about amongst the staff, amongst the players yesterday that we have to get cleaned up. Some of those things were first-game stuff, and some of them were just playing fast but without great technique at times and alignments and stuff. Those are going to happen in the first game. We’ve got to get those cleaned up moving forward. We are excited about having another home game, it was a great crowd, and electric crowd. I know the guys appreciated the fanbase coming out. We got a Bowling Green team that’s coming off a big win and playing with some confidence. So, we got to have a great game plan throughout the week and be ready for Saturday.”

 

On the message to the team to repeat the performance this week…

“One thing that I am a big believer in is whatever you did last Saturday has no bearing on the next Saturday, positive or negative. You are judged each week when you go out there on Saturdays, but in essence you need to win each day. You need to be able to prepare Monday through Friday to have a chance to be successful on Saturday. That’s kind of what we talked about with the guys. Our preparation, I thought, was really good against Nicholls. There is a reason why we had success on Saturday because we were prepared. We prepared for two weeks for Nicholls. Now we will only have five days for Bowling Green, but if we have that same kind of mindset within our preparation on a daily basis, we have a chance to be successful on Saturday.”

 

On what he saw from the defense in the opener…

“Some alignment errors we had on defense. We missed a couple of fits in a couple of gaps, missed a few tackles that we need to be able to clean up. Talking with the defense, I thought we had a few too many explosive plays that you want to try to eliminate. We didn’t have many snaps, so it is easy to find errors in those snaps. Obviously, for us, we need to play more snaps. You don’t want to play more, but we need to play more to have better evaluation on some guys. I just know that there was a lot of technique errors that Coach Haze (Scottie Hazelton) and the defensive staff talked about.”

 

On individuals standing out in last week’s contest after watching film…

“I was really pleased with (Josh) Rivas coming in and playing a number of snaps in a backup role, but he played enough. He played as many as probably some of the others. I thought Rivas did a really nice job playing really physical. So I was impressed with him. On the defensive, I thought Jordan Mittie did a really nice job. He did some good things. Jonathan Alexander made a really big play. We know he has big-play ability and was able to make a big play. So, those things stood out to me a little bit. Lance Robinson was really good on kickoff. He had three tackles and did everything technique wise we asked him to do and made some plays.”

 

On Malik Knowles’ drops and attributing those to first-game nervousness…

“Yeah, probably. He made some really tough catches, then a couple balls that I would say Malik would say himself that he needs to come down with. Obviously, we’ll continue to go to him because he’s a special player.”

 

On K-State’s offensive line…

“I thought we played really well up front, you rush for as many yards as we did and protect the quarterback like we did. A number of guys played, which was another thing we were pleased with was to get as many guys in the game that we could because we needed experience behind the starters that we have. I thought that they played at a really high level, played with great energy, and they did a really good job of communicating.”

 

On the difficulty of preparing for Bowling Green and their new staff…

“It is difficult to prepare for those guys because we’re watching, obviously, their one game and watching other games from different staff where the coordinators were. In a blowout win like they had, it’s kind of difficult to say, ‘Well, this is what they do.’ There is some carryover from what we’ve seen from the coordinators at their other schools. It’ll be a work in progress. We’re watching film of past years, not just the last game.”

 

On what Bowling Green does well…

“Run the ball, try to outnumber you at the point of attack with a lot of things we would do offensively – a lot of motions and alignments. They do a good job with their receivers and tight ends blocking as well to try to just create mismatches and force your corners to be run players by cracking your safeties. There are so many multitudes of formations and running some similar plays, but doing it out of a lot of different formations. Whether it is a shift or a motion, trying to change your eyes. Our eyes on defense have to be right this week. We can’t look at some of the eye candy that is motion and cross in front of us. We have to focus on our keys.”

 

On Denzel Goolsby and Skylar Thompson and what they mean as captains…

“They care so much about their teammates. They care so much about Kansas State football. They’ve been a part of this journey for an awful long time together. They are really close, and I know that guys look up to those two guys for what they do on the field and, more importantly, what they do off the field. They conduct themselves the right way, being servant leaders, making everyone around them better. Those are two guys that I was excited when the vote came out that they those two guys were captains because they are two guys I really look up to. They are two guys that I can bounce a lot of things off them because I trust those two guys and know that they’re going to give me not what I want to hear, but what I need to hear.”

 

On Jax Dineen and Josh Youngblood playing as true freshmen…

“Jax became a part of the mix when (Adam) Harter got hurt. We didn’t know if we were going to play Jax or not. Then when we lost Adam, we were short a little bit at fullback and we pressed him into some time to see how he would respond. He’s a guy that I think has a chance to be really good. He just has to fine tune-some techniques and some fundamentals, focus and all those things, but he has loads of ability. He’s a really good athlete, moves his feet really well, really productive with the ball in his hands. But, he also has to be a dominant blocker and has to know who he’s blocking and have the right technique. So, I’m excited because I think Jax has his best football in front of him. He’ll be a guy that will play more than the four (game) and will probably play most of the year. Youngblood is continuing to learn what we’re doing offensively. He has tremendous speed, tremendous athleticism. We’re just trying to design some things to make it a maybe a little bit simpler on him because he doesn’t have the experience that Malik (Knowles) does and Wykeen (Gill) does and Dalton (Schoen) does or Landry (Weber) where he can play multiple positions. But, we also know at that position, you need to have more than five guys, four guys, throughout a whole season. We thought Josh’s body of work was good enough throughout the month of August that we know his best football is in front of him. So, even though he didn’t catch any balls, we thought he had some productive plays out there. We’ll continue to push the envelope with him as far as giving him more of the playbook.”

 

On the inside access and the importance of social media…

“We have a great fan base. To give people that really want to be a part of these guys’ story, these guys’ journey. In the right setting, I think it’s a great thing for our fans and people to be a part of the journey that these guys are going on is pretty cool.”

 

On communication among the K-State staff during the game…

“I thought our communication was pretty good. At halftime, there was pretty simple adjustments. There weren’t many adjustments on defensive simply because we hadn’t played very many snaps. Offensively, we were talking about a number of things, but I liked  the communication. Scottie (Hazelton) and Mess (Courtney Messingham) are real veteran guys that can take over, accept input, calculate the input and decide what they are going to use. Those two guys were exceptional as far as the play calling as well as just listening to the input that guys were having between series. Obviously it was a first game, there’s some kinks we need to get ironed out. I think, operationally, offensively, we need to be faster calling plays. We need to be faster in and out of the huddle. I kind of anticipated that a little bit. They weren’t going fast, Nicholls wasn’t, so it’s not like we weren’t getting calls in. Those are things you’re concerned about, but we didn’t have those issues. It’s going to still be a work in progress each week. I know that they, probably, are talking about more things that they need to improve upon than even I am giving you just with their own conversations amongst each other.”

 

On his own role on game day…

“Overseeing both sides but I am not getting into the play calling. I’ll make suggestions or ask, ‘Hey, we missed the back on this blitz,’ or, ‘We didn’t pick up this one. Make sure we get that covered.’ Things that we see that if I want to make sure that if I see it out of a naked eye. I asked Coach Haze (Scottie Hazelton) one time, ‘We blitzed, we lost contain. Let’s make sure we address that.’ (He said), ‘Yep, we have that written down.’ If it is something with Mess (Courtney Messingham) personnel grouping, ‘I thought we’re trying to get this guy in the game,’ and (he said), ‘Yeah, we did, but he was getting something fixed. We’re trying to get him in the next series.’ I’m not big into the game plan to say, ‘Hey, here is what we need to do now.’ It was a game that was out of reach, I thought, too. So, each week will be a little bit different. When we’re on offense, I’m quiet. When we’re on defense, I’m quiet. When we flip over, then I’ll flip over and get a chance to talk to them while the other group is out there.”

 

WYATT HUBERT, SOPHOMORE DEFENSIVE END

On the win over Nicholls…

“We played pretty good, but one thing we need to fix is eliminating the big plays. After watching film, we gave up seven big plays of 15 yards plus, whether that was run or pass. That’s the key to being a successful defense is to limit the big plays.”

 

On only playing 20 snaps…

“Yeah that was definitely  surprising to me and every other defensive lineman pretty much. At times we got a little bored, but that’s a good problem to have with the offense being on the field for so long.”

 

On proving this team is for real…

“We just went out there and did our job. That’s something we have to stay consistent with every week.”

 

On the defensive performance…

“It doesn’t always come down to making plays. It also comes down to being in your gap, doing your responsibility, letting another guy make the play and filling those gaps so the linebackers can make tackles.”

 

ADAM HOLTORF, SENIOR OFFENSIVE LINEMAN

On the offensive line’s performance against Nicholls…

“I think we did a good job of being physical and coming off the ball. I think our technique could improve, but being physical and bringing the fight to them is something we all did well.”

 

On making a statement…

“I think we had a successful game one, but like always, you have to find ways to improve and build upon what we were able to.”

 

On playing alongside Evan Curl and Nick Kaltmayer…

“It’s been good. We had a lot of reps in camp together and it helps build that cohesiveness.”

 

DENZEL GOOLSBY, SENIOR DEFENSIVE BACK

On his first-person story on K-State’s website last week…

“I feel like one thing about me is it’s easy to see an athlete and identify them by their sport. I just know that I’m so much more than that and there are people who are so much more than their sport. So, I felt like going into my senior year, it was time to finally tell my full story, and I’m really grateful that K-State gives us the platform to do that.”

 

On defense’s performance against Nicholls…

“I think that we had a different type of mentality and that everyone was flying around. I really like how we feed off of each other’s energy. I felt like there was no time during the game that anyone was questioned on their responsibilities or what they were supposed to do. I know we made mistakes, but we also made up for it by how fast we flew around the football. I think that we can only grow and get better from here.”

 

SKYLAR THOMPSON, JUNIOR QUARTERBACK

On what the sledgehammer incentive adds to the team…

“It brings our team together because it shows you’re seeing your teammates and recognizing them in front of their teammates. Denzel (Goolsby) presented one to the whole scout team. Adam Holtorf gave one to the second offensive line that came in and drove the ball down the field and scored. It just shows that leaders and captains on the football team are recognizing the work that maybe some guys who don’t necessarily get as much of the spotlight as some people do, and that just naturally brings our team together. I think that’s really cool that Coach Klieman came up with that idea. We are just going to continue that and carry it on and it’ll be good for us.”

 

On building off of success…

“It’s going to be huge for us. I think what we have been trying to emphasize to our football team is that, as leaders, and Coach Klieman that last week is in the past. It’s a new week and we have a new football game ahead of us. We played well and we won. That’s great, but that’s in the past now and as Coach (Courtney) Messingham said our first game is that this is chapter one and we played Nicholls. How do we want to write this chapter and this is chapter two and there are different sections in the book of our season this year. We just have to be prepared and can’t be satisfied. The challenge for us is that for Nicholls, we had a couple of weeks to prepare for those guys, and this week we have one and that’ll be a challenge for us. We will have to focus on the details, practice well this week and make sure that we are carrying ourselves. Bowling Green just came off of a big win, so they are going to have a lot of confidence coming in here. We are just going to have to replicate the energy that we brought to the field on Saturday and the players’ confidence. I’m going to do my best to carry that over, and I’m challenging myself to be better than last week. I played pretty well, but I left things on the field where I want to be perfect. That’s probably not going to be the case of being perfect in a football game, but that’s why we work and put in the time that we do to be perfect. That’s where I’m at, and that’s what I’m going to try to lead our football team into this week.”

 

RYAN LACKEY
Director of Football Communications | K-State Athletics

 

 

Blue Jay soccer hosts Washburn Rural on Thursday

Opening day for junior varsity and varsity soccer will be this Thursday, Sept. 5 at Al Simpler Stadium. Junction City teams are hosting Washburn Rural. The JV will play at 4:30 and the varsity at 6:15 p.m.

Also on Thursday the Lady Jay varsity tennis team will host an invitational starting at 3 p.m., the JCHS varsity girls golf team will compete at the Shawnee Country Club beginning at 2 p.m. and Lady Jay varsity volleyball plays at Hayden in a quadrangular at 5 p.m.

The Blue Jay and Lady Jay cross country teams compete in an invitational at Warner Park in Manhattan on Saturday. It begins at 8:30 a.m.

This is game week for Blue Jay football

Blue Jay football offense practicing on Monday

The Junction City Blue Jay varsity football team is preparing for their first game of the season. They will play at Hays Friday evening at 7 p.m.

The team practiced on Labor Day at Al Simpler Stadium.

You can hear Friday night’s game on 107.9 FM and 1420 KJCK with the broadcast beginning at 6:30 p.m.

Correction: The Blue Jay 9th grade and junior varsity football teams host Hays on Sept. 9, not Sept. 5 as previously reported.

Kansas State will host Bowling Green on Saturday

Game 2
Bowling Green at K-State

Date: Saturday, September 7, 2019

Kickoff: 11 a.m.

Location: Manhattan, Kan.

Stadium: Bill Snyder Family Stadium (50,000)

Series: K-State leads, 1-0

K-STATE CONTINUES HOMESTAND WITH BOWLING GREEN
Following a dominating 49-14 win over Nicholls in Chris Klieman’s first game as head coach, K-State will host Bowling Green at 11 a.m. on Saturday inside Bill Snyder Family Stadium. The contest will be shown on FSN with Chris Vosters (play-by-play) and former K-State linebacker Ben Leber (analyst) on the call. The game can be heard across the 39-station K-State Sports Network with Wyatt Thompson (play-by-play), former K-State quarterback Stan Weber (analyst) and Matt Walters (sidelines) calling the action. The game will also be on Sirius channel 211, XM Channel 200 and in addition to the TuneIn app. Live stats are available at k-statesports.com, and Twitter updates (@KStateFB) will also be a part of the coverage.

A LOOK AT K-STATE

  • K-State opened the Chris Klieman era with a 49-14 win, the largest margin of victory by a head coach in his debut in school history.
  • K-State rushed for 361 yards in the opener, the most by a Wildcat team in a season opener since 1981, while its 573 yards of total offense ranked as the seventh-most in school history for a single game.
  • The Cats held the ball for 41:09 in the game, its largest time of possession total since 1997 (Texas A&M) and longest so far this season in college football.
  • Five different players recorded rushing touchdowns in the opener, while James Gilbert shined in his Wildcat debut rushing for 115 yards on 18 carries, marking the second most rushing yardage by a Wildcat in their debut.
  • The rushing attack has an experienced offensive line in front of it as there are five seniors in the starting rotation led by 39-game starter Scott Frantz, Tyler Mitchell with 31 starts and 25 by center Adam Holtorf.
  • Skylar Thompson shined in his 2019 debut, finishing with 212 yards and a TD passing on 16-of-22 aim and also 30 yards rushing on 10 carries, including one score.
  • At receiver, Dalton Schoen eclipsed the 1,000-yard marker for his career and led the way with three catches for 65 yards and a touchdown in the opener.
  • Much like its counterpart on offense, the defensive line is stacked with a two-deep of veteran players, headlined by senior tackle Trey Dishon, senior end Reggie Walker and sophomore end Wyatt Hubert, the latter coming off Freshman All-America honors in 2018.
  • Linebacker returns the team’s leading tackler a year ago in Da’Quan Patton, while two of the three defensive backs who led the team in picks last year – AJ Parker and Kevion McGee – are also back. Patton led the team in tackles with five in the opener, while Parker had the team’s lone interception in the game.
  • The kicker and punter spots are held down by players who were phenomenal in 2018 as kicker Blake Lynch is back after making 87.5-percent of his field goals last year, while punter Devin Anctil held a 43.6-yard average in 2018.

A LOOK AT BOWLING GREEN

  • Under new head coach Scot Loeffler, Bowling Green heads into the game with a 1-0 record after a 46-3 win over Morgan State in the opener last Thursday.
  • The Falcons dominated the game, outgaining Morgan State, 620-70, en route to a 43-point win.
  • Darius Wade finished the contest with 263 yards passing on 22-of-32 aim.
  • Andrew Clair and Davon Jones led the rushing attack, combining for 162 yards on 30 carries.
  • Eight different Falcons had multiple receptions in the game.
  • On defense, Bowling Green collected five sacks in the opener and only allowed 60 yards of total offense on 40 total plays.

    A LOOK AT THE SERIES

  • This marks the second time that K-State has faced Bowling Green.
  • K-State knocked off Bowling Green, 58-0, in 1997 in Manhattan.
  • The Wildcats are facing a MAC school for the 12th time in their history. K-State holds a 9-2 mark all-time against the conference.
  • K-State’s last game against the MAC school was 2011 when it earned a 37-0 victory over Kent State.

    A NEW ERA

  • The new era of K-State Football under Chris Klieman opened in Manhattan last week with a dominating 49-14 win over Nicholls, the largest margin of victory ever for a new Wildcat head coach.
  • Klieman was named the 35th head coach in school history on December 10, 2018.
  • K-State is now 21-11-3 when debuting a new head coach, including a streak of three-straight wins.
  • Klieman is now 3-0 in his inaugural game as a new head coach, earning a 48-3 win over Concordia (Ill.) as the new head coach at Loras College in 2005 and a 34-14 win at Iowa State as the new head coach at North Dakota State in 2014, in addition the win last week.

BIG 12 STRONG

  • Kansas State helped the Big 12 earn a perfect 10-0 record during the opening week of 2019.
  • The Big 12 was the only conference that opened the 2019 season undefeated, while it was the first time all 10 teams earned wins to open the year since 2012.

Ryan Lackey – Director of Football Communications

K-State Athletics

K-State opens the Chris Klieman era with a victory

Coach Chris Klieman

By Dewey Terrill

JC Post

The Kansas State Wildcats  compiled 426 yards of total offense including 214 on the ground from the combination of three new running backs and quarterback Skylar Thompson, enroute to a 49-14 victory over Nicholls State at Bill Snyder Family Stadium.

The win came in the opening game of the coach Chris Klieman era at Kansas State. He succeeded Bill Snyder, who retired following the 2018 season.

Skylar Thompson had a big game with 174 yards passing and one rushing touchdown. “I just managed the game well. I took what the defense gave me and never forced anything.” Thompson felt this was his best performance as a Wildcat. “Yes. One hundred percent. I have never felt like that walking off the field before here. Just the feeling of having fun and I just have not felt like that. ” Thompson added he wasn’t saying that he never had fun but called the performance against Nicholls, “just special.”

Quarterback Skylar Thompson

The K-State quarterback added that he played well but there things that he ” can get better at and learn from.” He also credited the strong performance by the offensive line, and said “They played tremendous. Our O-Line did a great job today. Our running backs ran the ball well but without the guys up-front opening up holes for them, it’s gonna be a tough time running the ball. Our front guys did a great job today.

K-State led 28-0 at halftime and never trailed in the game.

Kansas State Head Coach Chris Klieman said the Wildcats beat a good Nicholls State football team. On Thompson’s performance, Klieman stated, “Great performance. He’s a stud. He’s a winner.

Running back James Gilbert

Leading the way for the Wildcat running backs was the graduate transfer from Ball State, James Gilbert. He rushed for 115 yards and a touchdown on 18 carries.  Harry Trotter rushed for 50 yards and Jordon Brown for 49 yards with both scoring a touchdown.

Attendance for the game was 51,189. The game was three hours and three minutes long.

Kansas State ( 1-0 ) will host Bowling Green ( 1-0 ) next Saturday. Bowling Green opened their season with a 46-3 win over Morgan State this past Thursday night.

Royals top the Orioles 6-4

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Adalberto Mondesi looked anything but rusty in his return to the lineup.

The speedy shortstop matched career highs with four hits and three stolen bases after coming off the injured list Sunday, leading the Kansas City Royals to a 6-4 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.

“He was right in the middle of all of our offensive scenarios,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “He just looked great. He looked great at shortstop. I’m glad to have him back.”

That sentiment was shared by teammates.

“Mondi being back is huge for us,” pitcher Danny Duffy said. “Mondi is a very important part of our team.

“It was really nice to have him back out there doing what he does best, playing the game like it’s a game. It’s fun. It’s supposed to be fun. It hasn’t gone our way most of the time, but we have to treat every game like it’s a one-game series. That’s the mentality the rest of the year.”

Meibrys Viloria drove in the go-ahead run for the Royals with a two-out single in the seventh inning. Kansas City took two of three in a series between struggling teams.

Mondesi, who spent 41 games on the IL, led off the seventh with his third hit and stole second. With two outs, Alex Gordon drove him in with a tying double, and Gordon scored on Viloria’s single to make it 5-4.

“It was a process,” Mondesi said. “Everything went OK. I’m here and I’ll just keep playing hard. My plan was stay short, not try to do too much in the first game back. I wanted to put the ball in play, and it worked.”

Whit Merrifield added a solo homer in the eighth.

Kevin McCarthy (3-2) tossed 1 2/3 scoreless innings of relief for the win. Ian Kennedy pitched a perfect ninth for his 25th save in 28 chances.

Paul Fry (1-7) took the loss.

It was another tough defeat for first-year Baltimore manager Brandon Hyde.

“Yeah, you just feel like you like Paul Fry on any left-hander and it just doesn’t happen,” Hyde said. “(Shawn Armstrong) comes in against a right-hander and walks him. Walks kill you and we just didn’t get it done in the seventh inning.”

Duffy was solid in his own return from the injured list. He gave up four runs (three earned) and seven hits in 6 1/3 innings.

Baltimore scored in the first on a sacrifice fly by Renato Nunez.

Kansas City came right back with three ru

JCHS cross country teams conduct time trials

Members of the JCHS Blue Jay and Lady Jay cross country teams conducted their time trials on Saturday at Junction City Middle School. A total of 84 runners participated in that activity.

In the high school 4000 meter run a freshman Isaiah Smith turned in the fastest time of 15:14.26. A junior, Blake Reed finished second in 15:51.29.

In the Junction City Middle School 1600 meter run eighth-grader Lorna Rae Pierce finished first in 6:16.97 while seventh-grader Billy Dee finished second in 6:30.19.

In the Fort Riley Middle School 1600 meter run eighth-grader Christian Meza finished first in 6:27.61 while Luis Arocho was second in 6:56.57.

Here are the complete time trial lists courtesy of Blue Jay Athletics.org and Ryan Norton

RaceTab by MileSplit/FloSports Junction City High School
Time Trial Meet – 8/31/2019 11:48:51 AM
Junction City Middle School, Junction City, KS
JCHS 4000 Meter Run
=================================================================
Name Yr Team Time Pts
—————————————————————–
1 Isaiah Smith 9 Blue 15:14.26 1
2 Blake Reed 11 Black 15:51.29 2
3 Kenlin Ortiz 10 Black 16:23.21 3
4 Tristan Hicks 11 White 16:34.37 4
5 Tate Miller 9 Blue 16:45.98 5
6 Hayden Diestelkamp 10 Gray 16:47.48 6
7 Dain Yale 12 Gray 17:41.57 7
8 Bryan Gonzalez 12 White 18:03.52 8
9 Timothy Sifuentes 9 Gray 18:16.53 9
10 Abner Gonzales 10 Black 18:16.54 10
11 Ja Veon Richardson 10 White 18:53.33 11
12 Tyler Martinez 9 Black 19:29.58 12
13 Jacob Alvarez 10 Gray 19:43.44 13
14 Mariah Parrott 9 Blue 19:45.50 14
15 Blake Duncan 11 Blue 20:00.27 15
16 Dorian Church 11 Gray 20:02.67 16
17 Malia Silva 11 Black 20:07.87 17
18 Cassidy Eschliman 10 White 20:26.48 18
19 Joesph Hill 9 White 20:39.44 19
20 LaVon Nichol’s-Powell 10 Black 20:48.65 20
21 Ja Shean Richardson 10 Gray 20:50.53 21
22 Madison Burke 10 Blue 21:03.25 22
23 Kody Duncan 10 Black 21:07.91 23
24 Murin Burkett 10 White 21:13.60 24
25 McKayla Hicks 9 Black 21:14.62
26 Jett Harder 9 Blue 21:34.04 25
27 Koltyn Wallace 9 Blue 21:37.27 26
28 Dakota Dochenetz 12 Gray 22:22.77 27
29 Connor Gadberry 9 White 23:10.00 28
30 Mya Silva 10 White 23:56.28
31 Abigail Ticknor 9 Blue 24:17.69
32 Diego Hernandez Blue 24:32.21
33 Haley Sowder 12 Gray 24:52.24
34 Kayla McCollum 10 Gray 25:32.32
35 Emma Ferschl 10 Black 28:31.00
36 Leslie Rios 10 Blue 30:25.00

JCMS 1600 Meter Run
=================================================================
Name Yr Team Time Pts
—————————————————————–
1 Lorna Rae Pierce 8 Junction City Middle 6:16.97 1
2 Billy Dee 7 Junction City Middle 6:30.19 2
3 Tyler Taylor 8 Junction City Middle 6:45.69 3
4 Cael Smith 7 Junction City Middle 7:06.21 4
5 Ty Raulston 8 Junction City Middle 7:10.46 5
6 Jackson Pilling 7 Junction City Middle 7:11.67 6
7 Amyah O’Neal 7 Junction City Middle 7:20.69 7
8 Keyan Duncan 8 Junction City Middle 7:28.80
9 Gavan Hicks 8 Junction City Middle 7:32.71
10 Damia Boller 8 Junction City Middle 7:33.06
11 Adrian Duarte Velarde 8 Junction City Middle 7:46.26
12 Sebastian Schultz 8 Junction City Middle 7:50.03
13 Kourtney Dibben 7 Junction City Middle 7:53.23
14 Elaina Schmidt 8 Junction City Middle 7:54.90
15 Leon Leadabrand 8 Junction City Middle 8:13.11
16 Karley Kramer 8 Junction City Middle 8:14.38
17 Carrie Yale 7 Junction City Middle 8:18.18
18 David Rosauer 7 Junction City Middle 8:28.95
19 Victoria Kim 7 Junction City Middle 8:35.77
20 Mikynzie Tatro 8 Junction City Middle 8:38.67
21 Jaden Voma 7 Junction City Middle 8:43.19
22 Gabby Babylon 8 Junction City Middle 9:07.64
23 Kaylie Snyder 7 Junction City Middle 9:19.81
24 Alala Myers 7 Junction City Middle 9:26.74
25 Spencer Martin 7 Junction City Middle 9:48.15
26 Jonathan Zamorano 8 Junction City Middle 10:04.85
27 Hailey Lemon 7 Junction City Middle 10:10.09
28 Cresida Cardenas 7 Junction City Middle 10:11.03
29 Myah Waliyaya 7 Junction City Middle 10:11.62
30 Tyler Cieluch 7 Junction City Middle 10:40.13
31 Hannah Beniot 7 Junction City Middle 10:41.14
32 Nicole Green 7 Junction City Middle 10:44.10
33 Emily Stevens 7 Junction City Middle 12:44.44

FRMS 1600 Meter Run
=================================================================
Name Yr Team Time Pts
—————————————————————–
1 Christian Meza 8 Fort Riley Middle Sc 6:27.61 1
2 Luis Arocho 8 Fort Riley Middle Sc 6:56.57 2
3 Korbin Ortiz 7 Fort Riley Middle Sc 7:15.30 3
4 Daisy Kent 7 Fort Riley Middle Sc 7:19.64 4
5 Graycee Langford 7 Fort Riley Middle Sc 7:24.36 5
6 Shelby Long 7 Fort Riley Middle Sc 8:34.94 6
7 Evan Hall 8 Fort Riley Middle Sc 9:00.13 7
8 Kairi Van Metre 7 Fort Riley Middle Sc 9:28.09
9 Indrie Friday 7 Fort Riley Middle Sc 9:28.69
10 Noah Deppe 7 Fort Riley Middle Sc 11:28.10
11 Collen Cruzen 7 Fort Riley Middle Sc 11:32.42
12 Sunny Yim 7 Fort Riley Middle Sc 11:36.26
13 Gabriel Van Metre 8 Fort Riley Middle Sc 11:43.65
14 Maliyah Berry 7 Fort Riley Middle Sc 13:33.57
15 Reyanunna Berry 7 Fort Riley Middle Sc 13:37.48

Kansas rallies to defeat Indiana State 24-17

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Carter Stanley threw a 22-yard touchdown pass to Daylon Charlot with 2:20 left in the game, and Kansas rallied for a 24-17 victory over Indiana State on Saturday to avoid saddling new coach Les Miles with a devastating defeat in his debut.

The Sycamores had clawed back from a 16-3 deficit, taking the lead when Stanley fumbled in the end zone and Inoke Moala recovered it for a touchdown with 4:24 left in the game.

But the Jayhawks’ senior quarterback calmly responded to adversity, hitting Andrew Parchment with a couple of passes, finding Charlot for a 26-yard gain then hitting him again for the go-ahead score.

The Jayhawks used an end-around pass to convert the 2-point conversion, then stopped the Sycamores in the closing minutes to avoid losing to their third FCS school in the last five seasons.

Hasan Defense returned an interception 57 yards for a touchdown for Kansas. Khalil Herbert added 88 yards rushing, and Parchment had eight catches for 121 yards, as the Jayhawks tried to build on some of the excitement that Miles has brought to the program.

It wasn’t always pretty for the national-title winning “Mad Hatter.”

His kicker, Liam Jones, missed a field goal and extra point. Stanley fumbled a snap on fourth down to spoil another drive. And there were far too many blown assignments on both sides of the ball to think Kansas is much different than its woeful years under Turner Gill, Charlie Weis and David Beaty.

The Sycamores’ Ryan Boyle threw for 219 yards with a touchdown, but he also tossed a pair of costly interceptions. Titus McCoy had 88 yards rushing before leaving with a left knee injury.

Still, the Missouri Valley school was in the game in the fourth quarter. Boyle threw a touchdown pass to Dante Jones to get the Sycamores within 16-10 with 10:52 left, and their score on defense gave them hope of their first win over an FBS school in 33 tries.

Instead, the Kansas defense that’s been so maligned over the years came up with a big stop, forcing Boyle into throwing a fourth-down incompletion with 1:35 left to essentially end the game.

The Sycamores will no doubt rue a couple of missed chances.

They looked as if they might have scored a touchdown just before halftime, but Dante Hendrix had a sliver of his toe out of bounds when he hauled in the catch in the back of the end zone. Boyle also had an interception at the goal line as the Sycamores were about to score.

Throw in Jerry Nunez’s two missed field goals and Indiana State made too many mistakes to overcome.

WIldcats prepare to open the Chris Klieman era


Nicholls at K-State

Saturday

Kickoff: 6 p.m.

Stadium: Bill Snyder Family Stadium (50,000)

Series: First Meeting

A NEW ERA

  • The 2019 season opens a new era ofK-StateFootball as Chris Klieman will lead the Wildcats for the first time this Saturday against Nicholls.
  • Klieman was named the 35th head coach in school history on December 10, 2018.
  • The previous 34 head coaches have combined to earn a 20-11-3 record in their first game leadingK-State.
  • Klieman is 2-0 in his inaugural game as the new head coach, earning a 48-3 win over Concordia (Ill.) as the new head coach at Loras College in 2005 and a 34-14 win at IowaStateas the new head coach at North Dakota State in 2014.

A LOOK AT K-STATE

  • K-State boasts 40 returning letterwinners – including 18 starters – from last season as the Wildcats usher in a new era of K-State football.
  • Klieman’s staff features nine new coaches with Courtney Messingham leading the offense and Scottie Hazelton leading the defense, while quarterbacks coach Collin Klein returns for his fifth season in Manhattan.
  • The Wildcats bring back a career 14-game starter at quarterback in Skylar Thompson, who enters his junior season as one of only two players in school history to reach 2,000 career passing yards prior to the end of his sophomore season.
  • Thompson, a team captain, will have an experienced offensive line in front of him as there are five seniors in the mix to start, while they six possible starting linemen have combined for 96 career starts, including 38 by left tackle Scott Frantz, 30 by right guard Tyler Mitchell and 25 by center Adam Holtorf.
  • The Wildcats do not return any rushing yards by running backs from last year – a program first since at least 1949 – but they did bring in graduate transfers James Gilbert (BallState) and Jordon Brown (North Carolina), both of whom are career 1,000-yard rushers.
  • At receiver, Dalton Schoen returns for his senior year needing only 10 yards to hit the 1,000-yard mark for his career, while the tight end spot will be stabilized by sophomore Nick Lenners and senior Blaise Gammon.
  • Much like its counterpart on offense, the defensive line is stacked with a two-deep of veteran players, headlined by senior tackle Trey Dishon, senior end Reggie Walker and sophomore end Wyatt Hubert, the latter coming off Freshman All-America honors in 2018.
  • Linebacker returns the team’s leading tackler a year ago in Da’Quan Patton, while two of the three defensive backs who led the team in picks last year – AJ Parker and Kevion McGee – are also back.
  • The kicker and punter spots are held down by players who were phenomenal in 2018 as kicker Blake Lynch is back after making 87.5-percent of his field goals last year, while punter Devin Anctil held a 43.6-yard average in 2018.

A LOOK AT NICHOLLS

  • Nicholls returns 40 letterwinners, including 12 starters, off a team that finished the 2018 season with a 9-4 record and a 7-2 mark in league play to win the Southland Conference.
  • The Colonels advanced to the second round of the FCS playoffs where they lost to Eastern Washington, a team that made the FCS Championship but was downed by the Chris Klieman-led North DakotaStateBison.
  • Nicholls enters the 2019 season by being ranked in the top 25 of the FCS, garnering an 11th-place ranking in the FCS Coaches Poll and a No. 12 spot in the STATS FCS Top 25.
  • Tim Rebowe enters his fifth year at the helm after spending the previous 11 seasons as an assistant at Louisiana. He holds a 25-22 record in Thibodaux and has led the Colonels to consecutive FCS Playoff appearances.
  • Quarterback Chase Fourcade enters his fourth year as the starting quarterback as he was named an FCS Preseason All-American and to the Walter Payton Award Watch List as the FCS Offensive Player of the Year.
  • Fourcade has thrown for 7,728 career yards and 53 touchdowns, including career highs of 2,930 yards and 21 scores a year ago.
  • Nicholls’ leading rusher from a year ago is also back in Dontrell Taylor, who just missed out on a 1,000-yard season with 990 yards and nine touchdowns.
  • Fourcade also chipped in in the rushing game by totaling 659 yards and 13 scores.
  • The Colonels’ leading returning receiver is Dai’Jean Dixon, who finished second on the team last year with 753 yards and seven touchdowns on 53 catches.
  • Defensively, Nicholls brings back its leaders in tackles (Khristian Mims – 76), tackles for loss (Evan Veron – 22.0) and sacks (Sully Laiche – 8.5), while two of the three players with a team-leading two interceptions are also back in Mims and Darren Evans.A NEW ERA
  • The 2019 season opens a new era of K-State Football as Chris Klieman will lead the Wildcats for the first time this Saturday against Nicholls.
  • Klieman was named the 35th head coach in school history on December 10, 2018.
  • The previous 34 head coaches have combined to earn a 20-11-3 record in their first game leadingK-State.
  • Klieman is 2-0 in his inaugural game as the new head coach, earning a 48-3 win over Concordia (Ill.) as the new head coach at Loras College in 2005 and a 34-14 win at IowaStateas the new head coach at North Dakota State in 2014.

 

LOOKING FOR 200
• Bill Snyder Family Stadium is entering its 52nd year in 2019, and the Wildcats can hit a milestone win in the facility this Saturday as they hold a 199-116-3 (.631) all-time record.

  • The record has been even better since 1990 as K-State holds a 153-40-1 (.791) mark when playing at home, including a 74-6 (.950) mark in non-conference games.

 

TEAM LEADERS

  • KansasStateannounced last Friday that seven players were voted team captains for the 2019 season.
  • The list includes: Skylar Thompson, Trey Dishon, Denzel Goolsby, Wyatt Hubert, Dalton Schoen, Reggie Walker and Adam Holtorf.
  • Each are serving as full-time captains for the first time.
  • Hubert is just the eighth sophomore in program history to be named a captain. He is joined on that list by Mark Simoneau (1997), Terry Pierce (2001), Josh Freeman (2007), Alex Hrebec (2009), currentK-StateQB coach Collin Klein (2010), B.J. Finney (2012) and Dalton Risner (2016).

 

RYAN LACKEY
Director of Football Communications | K-State Athletics

 

 

 

 

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