PITTSBURG, Kan. —
Coaches’ whistles and loud rap music escaped Carnie Smith Stadium and competed with the words Harlan Hess was saying on Thursday afternoon.
He stood outside Pittsburg State’s practice, 50 years after his senior season ended in disappointing fashion.
And he had a message for this year’s Gorilla seniors heading into their season finale.
“This is it. It’s the finality,” said Hess, who is very visible around the Pitt State program. “You always want to leave on as high of a note as you can get. We haven’t hit the high notes we planned to hit.”
Hess has something in common with the year’s senior class. He and his teammates won a national championship as juniors in 1961 before a disappointing senior campaign, one that finished with a 6-3 record after a 35-0 loss at Nebraska-Omaha.
The same goes for John Levra, a junior guard on the 1957 national title squad. He earned second-team All-Central Intercollegiate Conference honors in 1958, but the team finished 4-5-1, capped by a 40-3 home loss to Northeastern State.
“It’s really, really hard to repeat as national champions,” Levra said. “I know this year’s team had some great hopes and anticipation. And they started out very well, winning by wide margins. But it just didn’t work out that way.
“I still think this is a very good team. Hopefully they can end on a positive note.”
Ending on a positive note, of course, would mean the Gorillas getting past a fired-up Missouri Southern squad in Saturday’s Sonic Miner’s Bowl.
If the Gorillas happen to win against the Lions, they would wrap up the season 7-3 and could work their way into a postseason bowl, perhaps the Mineral Water Bowl in Excelsior Springs, Mo., or the Kanza Bowl in Topeka, Kan.
But the only thing guaranteed is Saturday.
“I’m just going to live it up. Live it up this last week of practice,” senior center Aaron Kolich said. “On Saturday after 2 p.m. I probably won’t be able to put these pads on again, so just take everything I can from it.”
Hess, stating the obvious, said Kolich and his classmates will take much more from it if they can end their careers with a win.
Although he said the 1961 national title is “all I talk about now,” he also said the memories of the disappointing end to his senior season still come back to him.
“I’m not saying that you totally walk away feeling like a loser,” Hess said, thinking back to that last game, one which he missed with a broken leg. “Anything short of a championship, to be honest with you, you feel like you lose. I don’t like the ‘loser’ term, but we didn’t do it.”
Hess missed the final three games of the season. That, he said, coupled with his career ending with a defeat, led to a rough spot.
“Those three weeks was the darkest time of my life,” he said. “I’m not saying I was depressed or anything, but athletically-speaking I was. It was the worst month of my life.”
Pitt State senior defensive end Gus Toca said during Thursday’s press conference that his classmates understand the importance of Saturday and that the team’s underclassmen have made it a point to do what they can to send them out winners.
“Everybody seems to be practicing hard for us and we really appreciate that,” he said. “We don’t a work team guy to just go out there and lay down for us. We want him to work hard for us and make us better and I think everybody gets that.”
Missouri Southern Sports
Message for PSU: 'This (game) is it'
- Missouri Southern Sports
-
-
2 Lions earn All-American track honors
Missouri Southern freshmen Kaylee Morgan and Brittani Reagan earned All-America honors in the long jump on Thursday during the first day of the NCAA Division II Outdoor Track and Field Championships at the Neta and Eddoe DeRose Thunderbowl.
-
Division II track championships begin today
Almost half of Missouri Southern’s 16 entries are top-8 seeds in this week’s NCAA Division II Outdoor Track and Field Championships.
-
Rutledge retiring after national track and field competition
Patty Vavra knows it’s going to happen at some point during the next school year.
-
4 named to MSSU Athletics Hall of Fame
Four former athletes — football player Yancy McKnight, pole vaulter Seth Isringhausen, baseball player Bryce Darnell and volleyball-softball player Stacy Harter Smith — comprise the 2013 class for the Missouri Southern Athletics Hall of Fame, it was announced Tuesday.
-
'No one deserved to lose' Southern opener against Mavs
It’s hard to imagine a bigger emotional roller-coaster than the one the Missouri Southern baseball team rode the past week.
-
Lions eliminated at regional
After a 14-inning heartbreaking defeat late Thursday night to Minnesota State, there was a question as to how Missouri Southern would respond on such a short turnaround.
-
Lions squeezed in 14-inning loss to Minnesota State
An instant classic.
-
Lions open regional play against top-seeded Minnesota State
For most of March and April, Minnesota State endured a long winter as it gradually made its case for the home-field advantage that goes along with being the No. 1 seed in the NCAA Division II Central Region baseball tournament.
-
Lions qualify 12 for track nationals
Missouri Southern has qualified a dozen athletes — six men and six women — for the NCAA Division II Outdoor Track and Field Championships, it was announced Tuesday.
-
Times set for MSSU's regional tourney
MIAA Tournament champion Missouri Southern will travel to Mankato, Minn., today by bus in preparation for the six-team Central Region tournament at Franklin Rogers Park.
- More Missouri Southern Sports Headlines
-
2 Lions earn All-American track honors




