February 11, 2012

Kansas City bank fails

A Kansas City, Missouri bank has failed and is now under the control of a bank in Kansas.

An offficial with the Missouri Division of Finance, which accepted possession of First Bank of Kansas City, says the bank’s demise was due to poor risk selection and aggressive lending practices of prior management, resulting in substantial investment in high-risk loans which were more than the bank could support.

The Division accepted possession of the bank, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was appointed as receiver, and the bank was then sold to Great American Bank of DeSoto, Kansas.

Assets of the bank totaled $15.1 million as of August 31st. Customers will automatically become customers of Great American Bank with their deposits insured by the FDIC.

NASCAR’s Edwards breaks foot playing frisbee

Carl Edwards says he will still be able to race in the Nationwide and Sprint Cup races this weekend in Atlanta, despite a broken right foot.  Edwards was in Columbia playing frisbee with his friends when the freak accident took place.

This will obviously go down as one of the goofiest sports injuries.  Edwards said in a statement, "I know this probably sounds ridiculous…I can hardly believe it myself.  I was playing frisbee with a couple of buddies and I put my foot on it, my friend dove for it and the next thing you know…we all heard a pop."

With two races left before the Cup Chase, this is certainly something he didn’t want to have happen, but he’ll wear a protective boot.  The big question will be…any backflips if he wins?

Chiefs offense lifeless in loss to Rams

9-4 Croyle.JPG Even with Todd Haley calling the plays, the Chiefs were unable to get into the end zone and lost their fourth preseason game falling to the Rams’ in the Governor’s Cup 17-9.  (Croyle crunched in the first half.  Photo courtesy of Bill Greenblatt, UPI)

I wouldn’t say Haley’s play calling was the reason for the loss.  I would blame it more on the quarterback play.  Three times in the first half, the Chiefs were able to get into the red zone but had to settle for Ryan Succop field goals.  He connected from 31, 40, and then 34 in the first half.

Brodie Croyle was just 5 of 16 for 78 yard as he played the first half.  In what Haley called the battle for the back up job, Tyler Thigpen didn’t do any better.  He was 2 of 7 for 49 yards and he got picked off twice including a 28 yard interception return by Quincy Butler, the Rams second defensive touchdown in two weeks.

9-4 Savage.JPG The Chiefs running game showed a couple of bright spots.  Larry Johnson broke off a big run and finished with 58 yards and five carries and Dantrell Savage rattled off a 70 yard run. (photo courtesy of Bill Greenblatt, UPI)

After four games, my assessment of the Chiefs is this:  The offense does have the opportunity to play better with Matt Cassel under center. The running game has looked better than last year and it’s clear Croyle and Thigpen cannot lead this offense.

9-4 Berlin.JPG The Rams had their own quarterback battle taking place as Brock Berlin was fighting with Keith Null for the number three spot.  Both QBs finished 9 for 17 with Berlin throwing a six yard touchdown pass in the second quarter.  I think when all is said and done, Berlin will hold onto the number three job. (Photo courtesy of Bill Greenblatt)

The Rams offense will struggle.  Marc Bulger has not seen any type of action since breaking his pinkie finger.  How can one expect Bulger to come in with little practice under his third offensive system in three years and be effective?  I’m encouraged by the Rams defense.  They creating turnovers, tackling better than last year, but three road games in the first four could lead to a slow start.

SEMO scores 72 in win over Quincy

The Southeast Missouri State Redhawks set a new modern day record for most points in a game with a 72-3 rout over Quincy Thursday night at Houck Stadium in Cape Girardeau, MO.
 
Special teams and defense helped the Redhawks jump on top of Quincy in the first five minutes of the game.  First, Jacob McKinley ran the opening kickoff back 80 yards to set up Southeast’s first touchdown, a 2-yard run by Henry Harris on the third play of the game.

Then Tyler Epstein intercepted Sam Donatucci’s first pass on the second play of Quincy’s opening drive and ran 24 yards for a touchdown to make it 14-0  After SEMO forced Quincy to punt on its next possession. Andrew Adams blocked Kyle Homeyer’s kick and true freshman Tylor Brock recovered the ball in the end zone, giving the Redhawks a 21-0 lead.

Redhawks Matt Scheible completed 11-of-18 passes for 222 yards and two touchdowns in just the third start of his career. Walter Peoples caught five passes for 76 yards and a touchdown, while and went went over 1,000 receiving yards in his Southeast career.  The Redhawks scored six rushing touchdowns on the night, matching a single-game school record.

#19 Mules roll over Miners

The No. 19 Central Missouri Mules scored the game’s first 27 points and rolled to a 50-13 win over Missouri S&T on Thursday night with  MIAA Player of the Week Eric Czerniewski leading the way.

The Mules QB went 19-of-22 for 279 yards and four touchdowns.  UCM would score on 8 of 11 possessions.  The Mules never punted, were stopped only 
once while two of their drives end in taking a knee at the half and end of the game. 

The Mules took 33-6 lead at the break, racking up 305 yards of offense in the half.  Czerniewski played only the first series of the second half, leading the Mules 88 yards in 10 plays, capped by a 10-yard TD pass to make it 40-6.