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Wednesday, November 25, 2020

S&H Farm Supply 11/24/2020 High School Basketball Scoreboard, presented by Post Game Pizza, Doke Propane, Bank of Billings and Chevy Dealers of the Ozarks

 








Girls Scoreboard

College Heights 47
Jasper 42 

Licking 46
St. James 44

Rolla 71
Sullivan 43

Hollister 62
Ava 42

Mt. Vernon 51
Nevada 30

























Fair Grove 65
Mountain Grove 42

Carthage 79
Hillcrest 33

Nixa 67
Parkview 33

Kickapoo 69
Thayer 19

Brohaugh 44
Thomas Jefferson 27

Benton 65
St. Joseph Central 52

Steelville 76
Dixon 33

Herculaneum 70
Windsor 45

Pilot Grove 63
Smithton 55




















Verona Tournament

Wheaton 38
Marionville 36

Purdy 67
Everton 34

Fair Play Tournament

Morrisville 41
Stockton 35












Boys Scoreboard 

Marshfield 54
Conway 33

Pierce City 46
Cassville 34

East Newton 70
Clever 41

Joplin 80
McDonald County 60

Republic 60
Helias Catholic 42

Morrisville 65
Walnut Grove 27
















Forsyth 77
Mansfield 72

Chadwick 74
College Heights 47

Willard 65
Central 58

Ava 53
Norwood 48

Springfield Catholic 69
Mtn. Grove 48

Gainesville 73
Bakersfield 58

Hollister 68
Spokane 48











Westran 64
South Shelby 44

Liberal 55
McAuley Catholic 54

Golden City 83
Jasper 48

Steelville 38
Dixon 32

Dora 64
Bradleyville 59

Versailles 117
Eugene 106

















Jefferson City 71
Smith-Cotton 55

Stockton 52
Warsaw 32

Fulton 77
Warrenton 53







                 

            
















Tuesday, November 24, 2020

History of Thanksgiving Football, presented by S&H Farm Supply, Great Southern Bank and Post Game Pizza

 The concept of American football games being played on Thanksgiving Day dates back to 1876, shortly after the game had been invented, as it was a day that most people had off from work. In that year, the college football teams at Yale and Princeton began an annual tradition of playing each other on Thanksgiving Day.[1] The University of Michigan also made it a tradition to play annual Thanksgiving games, holding 19 such games from 1885 to 1905.[2][3][4][5][6] The Thanksgiving Day games between Michigan and the Chicago Maroons in the 1890s have been cited as "The Beginning of Thanksgiving Day Football."[7] In some areas, most commonly in New England, high-school teams play on Thanksgiving, usually to wrap-up the regular-season.

By the time football had become a professional event, playing on Thanksgiving had already become an institution. Records of pro football being played on Thanksgiving date back to as early as the 1890s, with the first pro–am team, the Allegheny Athletic Association of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In 1902, the "National" Football League, a Major League Baseball-backed organization based entirely in Pennsylvania and unrelated to the current NFL, attempted to settle its championship over Thanksgiving weekend; after the game ended in a tie, eventually all three teams in the league claimed to have won the title. Members of the Ohio League, during its early years, usually placed their marquee matchups on Thanksgiving Day. For instance, in 1905 and 1906 the Latrobe Athletic Association and Canton Bulldogs, considered at the time to be two of the best teams in professional football (along with the Massillon Tigers), played on Thanksgiving. A rigging scandal with the Tigers leading up to the 1906 game led to severe drops in attendance for the Bulldogs and ultimately led to their suspension of operations. During the 1910s, the Ohio League stopped holding Thanksgiving games because many of its players coached high school teams and were unavailable. This was not the case in other regional circuits: in 1919, the New York Pro Football League featured a Thanksgiving matchup between the Buffalo Prospects and the Rochester Jeffersons. The game ended in a scoreless tie, leading to a rematch the next Sunday for the league championship.

The Detroit Lions, seen here during the 2007 Thanksgiving game against their division rival Green Bay Packers, have played on Thanksgiving since 1934.

Several other NFL teams played regularly on Thanksgiving in the first eighteen years of the league, including the Chicago Bears and Chicago Cardinals (1922–33; the Bears played the Lions from 1934 to 1938 while the Cardinals switched to the Green Bay Packers for 1934 and 1935), Frankford Yellow JacketsPottsville MaroonsBuffalo All-AmericansCanton Bulldogs (even after the team moved to Cleveland they played the 1924 Thanksgiving game in Canton), and the New York Giants (1929–38, who always played a crosstown rival). The first owner of the Lions, George A. Richards, started the tradition of the Thanksgiving Day game as a gimmick to get people to go to Lions football games, and to continue a tradition begun by the city's previous NFL teams.[8] What differentiated the Lions' efforts from other teams that played on the holiday was that Richards owned radio station WJR, a major affiliate of the NBC Blue Network (the forerunner to today's American Broadcasting Company); he was able to negotiate an agreement with NBC to carry his Thanksgiving games live across the network.[9]

During the Franksgiving controversy in 1939 and 1940, the only two teams to play the game were the Pittsburgh Steelers and Philadelphia Eagles, as both teams were in the same state (Pennsylvania). (At the time, then-U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt wanted to move the holiday for economic reasons and many states were resistant to the move; half the states recognized the move and the other half did not. This complicated scheduling for Thanksgiving games. Incidentally, the two teams were also exploring the possibility of a merger at the time.[10]) Because of the looming World War II and the resulting shorter seasons, the NFL did not schedule any Thanksgiving games in 1941, nor did it schedule any in the subsequent years until the war ended in 1945. When the Thanksgiving games resumed in 1945, only the Lions' annual home game would remain on the Thanksgiving holiday. In 1951, the Packers began a thirteen-season run as the perpetual opponent to the Lions each year through 1963.

The All-America Football Conference and American Football League, both of which would later be absorbed into the NFL, also held Thanksgiving contests, although neither of those leagues had permanent hosts. Likewise, the AFL of 1926 also played two Thanksgiving games in its lone season of existence, while the AFL of 1936 hosted one in its first season, which featured the Cleveland Rams, a future NFL team, and the 1940–41 incarnation of the American Football League played two games in 1940 on the earlier "Franksgiving" date.

In 1966, the Dallas Cowboys, who had been founded six years earlier, adopted the practice of hosting Thanksgiving games. It is widely rumored that the Cowboys sought a guarantee that they would regularly host Thanksgiving games as a condition of their very first one (since games on days other than Sunday were uncommon at the time and thus high attendance was not a certainty).[11] This is only partly true; Dallas had in fact decided to host games on Thanksgiving by their own decision because there was nothing else to do or watch on that day. In 1975 and 1977, at the behest of then-Commissioner Pete Rozelle, the St. Louis Cardinals replaced Dallas as a host team (Dallas then hosted St. Louis in 1976). Although the Cardinals, at the time known as the "Cardiac Cards" due to their propensity for winning very close games, were a modest success at the time, they were nowhere near as popular nationwide as the Cowboys, who were regular Super Bowl contenders during this era. This, combined with St. Louis's consistently weak attendance, a series of ugly Cardinals losses in the three-game stretch, and opposition from the Kirkwood–Webster Groves Turkey Day Game (a local high school football contest) led to Dallas resuming regular hosting duties in 1978; it was then, after Rozelle asked Dallas to resume hosting Thanksgiving games, that the Cowboys requested (and received) an agreement guaranteeing the Cowboys a spot on Thanksgiving Day forever.[12]

Since 1978, Thanksgiving games have been hosted in Detroit and Dallas every year, with Detroit in the early time slot and Dallas in the late afternoon slot. Because of TV network commitments in place through the 2013 season, to make sure that both the AFC-carrying network (NBC from 1965 to 1997, and CBS since 1998) and the NFC-carrying network (CBS from 1956 to 1993, and Fox since 1994) got at least one game each, one of these games was between NFC opponents, and one featured AFC-NFC opponents. Thus, the AFC could showcase only one team on Thanksgiving, and the AFC team was always the visiting team.

Since 2006, a third NFL game on Thanksgiving has been played in primetime. It originally aired on the NFL Network as part of its Thursday Night Football package until 2011; in 2012, the game was moved to NBC as part of its Sunday Night Football package. The night game never had any conference tie-ins, meaning the league could place any game into the time slot; since NBC took over the game in 2012, each night game has featured two teams in the same division with the exception being in 2016 between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Indianapolis Colts. In 2014, a series of changes to the broadcast contracts freed CBS from its obligation to carry an AFC team; by 2018, the last vestiges of conference ties to the Thanksgiving games were eliminated (in practice, games on Fox remain all-NFC contests).

Throwback uniforms[edit]

Since 2001 teams playing on Thanksgiving have worn throwback uniforms on numerous occasions. In some years (namely 2002), it extended to nearly all games of the weekend, and in some cases also involved classic field logos at the respective stadiums.

From 2001 to 2003, Dallas chose to represent the 1990s Cowboys dynasty by wearing the navy "Double-Star" jersey not seen since 1995. In 2004, the team wore uniforms not seen since 1963. In 2009, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the AFL, both Dallas and Oakland played in a "AFL Legacy Game." In 2013, the Cowboys intended to wear their 1960s throwbacks, but chose not to do so after the NFL adopted a new policy requiring players and teams to utilize only one helmet a season to address the league's new concussion protocol; rather than sport an incomplete throwback look, the Cowboys instead wore their standard blue jerseys at home for the first time since 1963.[13] In 2015, the Cowboys resurrected their 1994 white "Double-Star" jerseys only this time wore them with white pants as part of the league's Color Rush, a trial run of specially-designed, monochromatic jerseys to be worn during Thursday games.

In 2001–2004, and again in 2008, 2010, 2017, and 2018 the Detroit Lions have worn throwback uniforms based on their very early years. For 2019, Detroit wore its silver Color Rush uniforms.

S&H Farm Supply 11/23/2020 High School Basketball Scoreboard, presented by Great Southern Bank, Doke Propane and Play It Again Sports

 








Girls Scoreboard

Van Buren 62
Dora 54

Clever 66
Marshfirld 60

Spokane 46
Monett 38

Joplin 46
East Newton 28

Neosho 52
Seneca 47

Diamond 52
Greenwood 51

Chadwick 73
Norwood 25

























Forsyth 55
Seymour 25

Niangua 55
Humansville 41

Stoutland 34
Macks Creek 31

Salem 63 
Plato 36

West Plains 48
Willow Springs 34

Conway 56
Cabool 53

Bergman AR 74
Blue Eye 53




















Belton 44
Grandview 41

Bishop LeBlond 52
Lathrop 31

Blair Oakds 53
Fulton 32

Monroe City 72
Moberly 57

Otterville 61
Osceola 29

Newburg 63
Summersville 42

Versailles 57
Tuscumbia 55

Winnetonka 33
Oak Park 26

Visitaiton 55
Clayton 47















Fair Play Tournament

Morrisville 48
Dadeville 23

Stockton 58
Fair Play 13


Verona Tournament

Verona 49
Wheaton 43

Purdy 62
Marionville 55




























Boys Scoreboard


Otterville 52
Osceola 34

Humansville 76
Niangua 56

Licking 72
Houston 56

















Thomas Jefferson 74
Exeter 26

Clearwater 67
Bismarck 33








                 

            
Vernon Tournament

Purdy 58
Verona 50

Pleasant Hope 57
Hurley 54















Thursday, November 19, 2020

S&H Farm Supply High School Basketball Schedule for 11/23/20 Presented by Great Southern Bank, Chevy Dealers of the Ozarks and Play It Again Sports.

 










Girls Basketball

Mansfield
Bakersfield

Osceola
Ballard

Strafford
Blue Eye

Central
Branson

Norwood
Chadwick

Montrose
Chilhowee

Viburnum
Eminence

Ash Grove
Crane
























Seymour
Forsyth

Willard
Glendale

Lockwood
Golden City

Diamond
Greenwood

Osage
Fatima

Niangua
Humansville

Eugene
Iberia

East Newton
Joplin




















Stoutland
Macks Creek

Spokane
Monett

Clever
Marshfield

Moberly
Monroe City

Seneca
Neosho

Sparta
Reeds Spring

Plato
Salem

Hurley 
Sarcoxie

Marshall
Smith-Cotton

Potosi
Steelville

Newburg
Summersville

Waynesville
Union

Dora
Van Buren

Tuscunbia
Versailles

West Plains
Willow Springs

Cole Camp
Warsaw
















Boys Schedule

Osceola
Ballard

Montrose
Chilhowee

Thomas Jefferson
Exeter

Viburnum
Eminence

Licking
Houston

NIangua
Humansville

Eldon
Linn















Verona
Purdy

California
Vienna

Bishop LeBlond
West Platte







































                 

            
















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