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7AM Sportscast 01/19/2019

Podcasts, Sports

January 19th, 2019 by admin

w/ Chris Parks

Midwest Sports Headlines: 1/19/2019

Sports

January 19th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Mid-America sports news from The Associated Press

AMES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa State quarterback Brock Purdy grew up idolizing Tim Tebow. After a phenomenal freshman season, perhaps it was more than serendipity that the Cyclones awarded Purdy No. 15, Tebow’s number at Florida. Purdy has gone from the third string to leading Iowa State to seven wins in nine games last season.

AMES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa State says it has rehired Tom Manning as its offensive coordinator. Manning spent last season on the staff of the Indianapolis Colts. He is returning to Ames to run the Cyclones offense under fourth-year coach Matt Campbell.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A 93-year-old World War II veteran has finally been given a medal he won at the 1944 Drake Relays track meet. The Des Moines Register reports that Ted Williams, of Altoona, had finished second in the discus among high school boys. But because of wartime metal rationing, he was given only a certificate that could be redeemed for a medal after the war. He finally received the medal Thursday from Drake University in a surprise ceremony staged by his friends in a coffee group.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Patriots are seeking their third straight Super Bowl appearance while the Chiefs are trying to make it back for the first time since 1970 when the two teams meet for the AFC title. New England has been the dominant franchise of this era, but Kansas City is hoping to take over that mantle behind young quarterback Patrick Mahomes.

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) — Tom Brady is playing up the underdog role this week as the New England Patriots prepare to play the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game. That’s right: The three-time NFL MVP and five-time Super Bowl champion is feeling disrespected. The Patriots are three-point underdogs against the AFC-best Chiefs.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Chiefs safety Eric Berry sounds confident that he’ll be on the field when Kansas City plays the New England Patriots in the AFC championship game at Arrowhead Stadium. Berry has been a full participant in practice this week after a foot injury. He says he needs the OK from coach Andy Reid to take the field on Sunday night.

UNDATED (AP) — When noted chef Kenneth Temple was asked to create chili for the Super Bowl, he dived right in with versions that reflect not only his native New Orleans, but New England, Los Angeles and Kansas City. All are distinctive for their ingredients and tastes.

Boys Class 1A and 2A District basketball assignments released

Sports

January 18th, 2019 by admin

The Iowa High School Athletic Association released the District assignments for Class 1A and 2A boys basketball on Friday. Follow the links below to check out all of the groupings in each class. Class 3A and 4A assignments are set to be released next Friday the 25th.

CLASS 2A

CLASS 1A

Campbell announces changes to ISU football coaching staff

Sports

January 18th, 2019 by admin

AMES, Iowa – Iowa State Head Coach Matt Campbell announced today changes to his coaching staff which includes a familiar name returning to Ames from the professional ranks, his reconnection with a college teammate who has significant Power 5 Conference coaching experience and several promotions, and position group and duty adjustments.

Tom Manning, who coordinated ISU’s offense from 2016-17, will rejoin the Cyclone staff after one year with the Indianapolis Colts as offensive coordinator.

Campbell has also added Matt Caponi, who most recently directed the defensive backs at West Virginia (2016-18), to work with the secondary. A college teammate of Campbell at Mount Union, Caponi has been a full-time assistant with both the Mountaineers and Arizona previously.

The addition of Manning and Caponi are pending successful background checks.

Nate Scheelhaase, who was Iowa State’s running backs coach in 2018, will shift to wide receivers beginning this spring. He replaces Bryan Gasser, whose contract was not renewed. Quarterbacks coach Joel Gordon has been promoted to passing game coordinator and special teams coach Joe Houston will move to an off the field position.

“I am very excited with the changes we made with our football staff,” Campbell said. “We brought in coaches who are familiar with our program, our league and our culture. I also made some adjustments internally which will better serve our student-athletes.”

Manning was tight ends coach with the Colts last season, helping the team advance to the divisional round of the AFC playoffs and a 10-6 record. Manning was instrumental in tutoring Eric Ebron into a Pro Bowl selection. Ebron was second on the team in receptions (66) and receiving yards (750) and broke the club’s record for touchdown catches by a tight end with 13.

Manning’s work as offensive coordinator in his first stint at Iowa State (2016-17) produced two of the most-prolific seasons in school history. The Cyclones averaged 27.7 points in 2016 (ninth-best in school history) and 29.2 points in 2017 (third in ISU annals).

ISU averaged 421.6 yards of total offense in 2016, the fourth-best mark in the ISU record book. The Cyclones established the top-two passing offenses in the program history (272.9 in 2017 and 258.8 in 2016) with Manning calling plays.

Manning is a former FootballScoop.com Offensive Line Coach of the Year when he was an assistant at Toledo working for Campbell.

Caponi, who has 15 years of collegiate coaching experience, is reuniting with Campbell. The two Mount Union graduates were teammates as players and colleagues as coaches at that Division III power. Caponi comes to Ames after serving as defensive backs coach at West Virginia the last three seasons when the Mountaineers were one of the top defensive teams in the Big 12. He coached the safeties at Arizona (2013-15) before going to WVU.

In 2018, Caponi mentored four players who earned All-Big 12 recognition. That list included Kenny Robinson Jr., who was First-Team All-Big 12 after tying for third in the league in interceptions (4) and ranking 14th in tackles (77).

Scheelhaase and Gordon had impressive debut seasons in Ames. Scheelhaase coached a productive group of tailbacks, including All-American David Montgomery. The junior rushed for 1,216 yards, becoming just the eighth Cyclone in school history to record multiple 1,000-yard seasons. Gordon navigated through the loss of a starting QB in the first game and tutored true freshman Brock Purdy through a terrific rookie season. Purdy’s 169.91 QB passing efficiency was sixth nationally.

Spring practice for the Cyclones starts March 12.

Chiefs’ Berry confident he’ll play AFC title game vs Pats

Sports

January 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Chiefs safety Eric Berry sounded confident Friday that he’ll be on the field when Kansas City plays the New England Patriots in the AFC championship game at Arrowhead Stadium. The three-time All-Pro has been a full participant in practice this week after dealing with a heel injury, but needs the OK from coach Andy Reid to take the field on Sunday night.

“I feel pretty good. Just talk to coach and see what he wants to do and go from there,” Berry said. “It would mean a lot not just for me and my family and my teammates, but the organization.” Berry tore his Achilles’ tendon in last year’s opener, sidelining him the rest of the season. He returned in time for summer workouts and the start of training camp. But a mysterious heel injury popped up that kept Berry off the field until Week 15 against the Chargers.

Berry played more the following week on the turf in Seattle, but the injury recurred and he missed the regular-season finale against Oakland and the divisional round matchup against Indianapolis.
“It was pretty frustrating, but you just have to keep rolling,” said Berry, who nevertheless broke down the pregame huddle with an emotional pep talk. “Keep focused and keep your head down.”

Berry has become a pro at overcoming adversity. He missed most of one season with a torn ACL in his knee, and he missed the end of another when he was diagnosed with cancer. In both instances, he recovered in time to play the following season. However, those situations were relatively straightforward. There was a clear diagnosis and obvious path toward recovery. But the heel has been a challenge for Berry and the organization, once viewed as a “day-to-day” situation that became a saga that lasted months.

There have been various reports, always citing unnamed sources, of a heel deformity that causes intense pain, but the Chiefs and Berry have refused to confirm them. Asked several times about the injury Friday, Berry merely replied: “It’s hard to explain.” Berry said he wasn’t concerned about the field causing the heel problems. It was torn up in the divisional round after several inches of snow fell before the game. The grounds crew spent this week replacing the turf between the hashes, along the sidelines and in one of the end zones.

“I’m just being prepared for every situation,” Berry said. “Our field crew, grounds crew is very good. They do a very good job. Just trusting in them that they can get the job done.” Berry’s value lies not just in his athletic ability, though the Chiefs could use some help covering Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski on Sunday. Rather, his biggest benefit to a defense that has struggled mightily at times this season may be his leadership and on-field demeanor.

“A huge impact. He’s a huge player for us,” Chiefs linebacker Dee Ford said, while defensive tackle Chris Jones said “the physicality he brings to this team and the leadership role is amazing.” When he’s at his best, Berry is one of the best safeties in the NFL, adequate in coverage and dynamic at stuffing the run. But even at a fraction of his best, Berry is still talented enough to impact a game, and that’s why his return could prove so critical to the Chiefs.

“I mean, Eric’s a good football player. He’s an All-Pro player,” Reid said. “That’d be an obvious statement, but it’s another good player in the mix. A great player.” Notes: Chiefs OLB Dorian O’Daniel (hamstring) was ruled out for the game. … WR Sammy Watkins (foot) and RB Spencer Ware (hamstring) participated in practice all week and are expected to play.

John J. Harris Wrestling Invitational condensed to one-day tourney on Saturday

Sports

January 18th, 2019 by admin

The John J. Harris Wrestling Invitational set for this weekend in Corning has another schedule change due to the impending winter weather. The tournament has now been condensed to a one-day event on Saturday with weigh-ins starting at 11:00am and wrestling beginning at noon.

Southwest Valley officials said six teams have dropped out of the tournament due to the weather. Fewer teams will accommodate a condensed schedule on Saturday that will hopefully work for the remaining teams involved around the weather impact.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 1/18/2019

Podcasts, Sports

January 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast with Chris Parks.

Atlantic boys basketball ends skid against Clarinda

Sports

January 18th, 2019 by admin

The Atlantic boys basketball team halted a seven game losing skid on Thursday night with a 62-49 win at Clarinda. The Trojans took the lead early in the game and were able to slowly build the lead in the second half. The Trojans led 21-16 at the end of the first quarter and the margin was also five points at halftime. Atlantic then pushed the lead to 9 by the end of the third and led by as many as 17 down the stretch.

Three Trojans finished in double figures on the night and Head Coach Jeff Ebling thought the team moved the ball well on the offensive end.

Tyler Moen led all scorers in the game with 16 points, 10 of those coming in the first half. Coach Ebling thought Moen had a great game slashing to open spots in the Cardinals’ zone.

Logan Reilly finished with 13 points and Chase Mullenix had 12 for the Trojans. Atlantic improves to 5-9 on the season overall.

Clarinda was led by 15 points from Connor Brown who hit 3 three-pointers in the first half. The Cardinals fall to 6-9 on the year.

Atlantic girls win foul-riddled game over Clarinda

Sports

January 18th, 2019 by admin

The Atlantic girls basketball team was able to hit free throws in a foul-riddled game to pick up their second win of the season over Clarinda 63-52 on Thursday night. The Trojans got their first official Hawkeye Ten Conference win with the help of 22-31 shooting from the free throw line, including 14-19 in the second half. The game didn’t have much of a flow with 58 total fouls called and 65 free throws shot between the two teams. After the game Atlantic Head Coach Dan Vargason said he was proud of the way the girls handled the game.

Coach Vargason also liked the team’s response to a close loss on Tuesday to Kuemper Catholic.

Atlantic had three players finish in double-figures led by 16 points from Alyssa Ginther. Baylee Newell finished with 15 and McKenzie Waters had 12. Ginther helped build the Atlantic lead early, coming off the bench to hit three first-quarter three pointers. Atlantic improves to 2-13 with the win and are now 1-7 in Hawkeye Ten Conference play.

Clarinda got 23 points from senior Taylor Wedemeyer; she had 14 of those points from the foul line. Darah Gray finished with 13 for the Cardinals. Clarinda falls to 1-14 overall and 0-8 in Hawkeye Ten play.

Man finally given discus medal he won in 1944 Drake Relays

Sports

January 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A 93-year-old World War II veteran has finally been given a medal he won at the 1944 Drake Relays track meet. The Des Moines Register reports that Ted Williams, of Altoona, had finished second in the discus among high school boys while competing for Knoxville High School. But because of wartime metal rationing, he was given only a certificate that could be redeemed for a medal after the war. Less than two months later Williams joined the Marines and eventually served in the Pacific theater. After the war he married and became a history teacher and coach.

The certificate remained stuffed away in his home until his birthday Thursday, when he received a medal from Drake University in a surprise ceremony staged by his friends in a coffee group. He was grateful for the acknowledgment of his accomplishment, saying, “This is a very, very important thing to me.”