Kansas State University

Jayhawk-Wildcat report: K-State 51, KU 13

First quarter

Key play: Jake Waters hit Tyler Lockett for a 44-yard touchdown pass on the first play of K-State’s second drive to give the Wildcats a 14-0 lead.

Key stat: Michael Cummings threw two interceptions.

Second quarter

Key play: Tyler Lockett caught a touchdown pass to give K-State a 31-6 lead and tie his father, Kevin, for the most touchdown receptions in school history. Earlier on the drive, he passed his father for the school’s receptions record.

Key stat: The Jayhawks’ 54-yard scoring drive was their longest since the third quarter of its loss to TCU.

Third quarter

Key play: Jake Waters hit Curry Sexton for a 37-yard touchdown pass to give the Wildcats a 45-13 lead.

Key stat: Jarvis Leverett, a third-string running back, ran for seven yards on two carries. His presence signaled a K-State rout.

Fourth quarter

Key play: Jack Cantele kicked a 39-year field goal.

Key stat: Backup quarterback Joe Hubener ran for 29 yards.

K-State report card

Offense: A. K-State’s rushing attack produced 194 yards and two touchdowns. That’s a big improvement from one yard against West Virginia. On top of 311 passing yards, it was a strong day all around.

Defense: A. Kansas managed 197 yards of offense, and the Wildcats intercepted two passes.

Special teams: A. The Wildcats converted all of their field goal tries and had big plays in the return game.

Coaching: A. No one motivates his team to play Kansas better than Bill Snyder.

Reason to hope: The Wildcats regained their offensive balance, throwing for 311 yards and rushing for 194 yards. Similar numbers will be needed against Baylor.

Reason to mope: K-State always struggles in Waco, Texas. It hasn’t beaten Baylor on the road since 2002.

Looking ahead: At least a share of the Big 12 championship will be on the line Saturday when the Wildcats face Baylor on the road. The Bears will be favored, but they didn’t look great against Texas Tech on Saturday.

KU report card

Offense: D. Two touchdown passes by Michael Cummings were well-thrown, but his two interceptions were sloppy misfires that cost KU 10 points. Not much going on in the running game, and that’s been the case all season. Cummings was sacked four times.

Defense: D. No huge breakdowns, but Kansas couldn’t come up with enough stops to keep the game interesting. If the key matchup was the Jayhawks’ secondary against K-State’s receiving tandem of Tyler Lockett and Curry Sexton, the Wildcats won. Each caught nine passes and scored a touchdown.

Special teams: D. The biggest issues occurred within moments. K-State blocked an extra point by Kansas kicker Matthew Wyman after the first touchdown, and the Wildcats’ Morgan Burns returned the ensuing kickoff 53 yards. The first good thing that had happened for Kansas was followed by two special-teams mistakes.

Coaching: C. History tells us any coach going against Bill Snyder for the first time is going to get smacked, and so it was for Bowen. If Kansas delivered its best effort of the season in the Iowa State and TCU games and its worst against Oklahoma, this one fell in between, closer to the Oklahoma effort.

Reason to hope: The Jayhawks will spend the entire offseason thinking things will be better because of a new coach, whether that’s Bowen or somebody else. It’s better than thinking about probable beatdowns in the Big 12. Also, unless Iowa State beats TCU next week, Kansas won’t finish last in the Big 12 for the first time since 2008. The Cyclones would be winless.

Reason to mope: The 3-9 final record is the same as last year, and it’s not been better for the Jayhawks since KU went 5-7 in 2009. And the Jayhawks will have another coach. If it’s not Bowen, the program will have a fifth coach in seven years.

Looking ahead: There will be a news conference soon to introduce the next year coach, then weeks of staff hiring news, followed by stories about how the staff is playing catch-up in recruiting. You know, the same story as 2010 when Kansas hired Turner Gill and 2012 when it hired Charlie Weis.

Notes

K-State held a groundbreaking ceremony at halftime for its $69 million renovation to its football complex on the north end of Snyder Family Stadium.

The Wildcats will demolish the current facility on Dec. 8 and begin construction on a new building immediately. Plans call for the structure to be built in time for the 2015 season. K-State players and coaches will temporarily be relocated to other areas on campus, including the new West Stadium Center, throughout bowl preparations and spring practice.

K-State says it has raised $48 million toward the privately funded project.

▪ Special teams contributor David Smith had to be carted off the field win an injury to his left leg in the second half. He was taken to the hospital for treatment, but waved to big applause on his way.

▪ K-State averaged 53,081 fans at its seven home games this season. That is the largest figure in program history.

▪ The Jayhawks finished 3-9 overall and 1-8 in the Big 12, the same records as last year. For the sixth straight season, KU didn’t win at least two conference games. In 2008, Kansas finished 4-4 in the league. That also was their last bowl season.

▪ KU linebacker Ben Heeney was credited with six tackles and finished his career with 335, eighth most in Kansas history. His 33 1/2 tackles for a loss ranks fourth.

Kellis Robinett

and Blair Kerkhoff

This story was originally published November 29, 2014 at 9:06 PM with the headline "Jayhawk-Wildcat report: K-State 51, KU 13."

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