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The Blame Game
Gabbert says reporters want him benched
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BIG 12 CONFERENCE
Kansas State (6-3, 3-3 Big 12)
at
No. 20 Missouri (7-2, 3-2), 11:30 a.m. (FSN)
Line — Missouri by 13.
Series Record — Missouri leads 59-31-5.
Last Meeting — 2009, Missouri 38-12.
WHAT’S AT STAKE — Missouri seeks to regain its footing after a pair of disappointing losses at Nebraska and Texas Tech following what had appeared to be a season-defining victory over Oklahoma. The Tigers are now No. 17 in BCS while Kansas State is No. 24, bowl eligible for first time since 2006 and carrying momentum from a blowout win over Texas.
KEY MATCHUP
     Missouri QB Blaine Gabbert vs. Kansas State defense. Wildcats intercepted Texas’ Garrett Gilbert five times last week, and Gabbert is coming off a pair of sub-par games. He was held to a career-worst 95 yards passing against Tech and has appeared skittish in the pocket.
PLAYERS TO WATCH
Kansas State: DB Tysyn Hartman had two interceptions last week, both setting up touchdowns, while QB Collin Klein and RB Daniel Thomas ran for two touchdowns apiece. Klein was surprise starter over Carson Coffman and rushed for 127 yards. Thomas averages 122 per game.
Missouri: DE Aldon Smith had nine tackles last week, and WR T.J. Moe is 10th in the NCAA with 7.22 receptions per game.
FACTS & FIGURES
Missouri has won its last five home finales with an average margin of 16.2 points, including 41-24 over Kansas State in 2007. ... Kansas State coach Bill Snyder is 14-4 against Missouri, including 13 in a row from 1993-2005. ... Missouri seniors have 37 victories, one off the school record set last year. ... Kansas State had five rushing touchdowns last week for the second time this season, also doing it Oct. 14 at Kansas. The Wildcats are second in the Big 12 in rushing yards. ... Kansas State threw only four passes last week. ... Since 1991, Kansas State is 42-13 in November under Snyder.

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — It’s been a tough few weeks for Blaine Gabbert. The Missouri quarterback insists he’s fine and says support from the coaching staff has not wavered.
Gabbert had a career-worst 95 yards passing last week in a 24-17 loss at Texas Tech, the No. 20 Tigers’ second straight setback following a 7-0 start. He said his troubles had nothing to do with the previous game, when he was sacked six times and appeared rattled at Nebraska.
He blamed reporters for wanting him benched in favor of freshman James Franklin.
“I think you guys are the ones that wanted me pulled,” Gabbert said this week. “Everyone on my team wanted me out there and I wanted to be out there. You guys’ opinions on who should get yanked really doesn’t matter to us at all.”
Missouri’s once prolific offense is sinking fast, totaling 34 points the last two games, and is a pedestrian seventh in the Big 12 in total offense at 407.8 yards per game. Gabbert has only 12 touchdown passes in nine games.
Last year, his first as the starter, Gabbert had 24 touchdown passes in 13 games.
Missouri head coach Gary Pinkel won’t pin the blame for the two-week tumble on his junior quarterback, saying it was more a case of the entire offense being “out of sync.”
“There are a lot of variables out there and he’s not perfect,” Pinkel said. “You look at the stats in the NFL and there’s some great players, but they aren’t going to have a perfect game every week.”
So Gabbert’s job is in no danger this week in the home finale against Kansas State (6-3, 3-3 Big 12). Missouri (7-2, 3-2) is 5-0 at home, one win away from its first perfect home schedule since 2003.
Franklin also had offers from Nebraska, Oregon, Oklahoma State, TCU and Kansas State. He’s appeared in six games, going 11 for 14 for 106 yards and a touchdown, and has run for two scores.
In small doses, the speedy Franklin has been impressive.
“The easiest spot to critique on the field, everyone’s favorite player on the field, is the backup quarterback,” Pinkel said. “We all know that. That doesn’t affect me in any way. I’m going to do what I think is right.”
Gabbert said there’s plenty of blame to go around.
“It’s a combination of things and we just have to get clicking,” he said. “We have to run better routes, we have to throw the ball better and we have to block better. It’s a multitude of reasons why we weren’t executing in that game.”
After reviewing game tape, Pinkel thought wide receivers “got open pretty good.”
“It’s either protection, routes, catching, throwing, timing, all of the above, and we just have to work through it,” Pinkel said. “We have to execute better and we’ll do that by executing better in practice.”
The Tigers have struggled lately against defenses daring them to run by dropping seven or eight defenders off the line. Nebraska was disruptive with a three-man rush much of the game, forcing Gabbert into a career-high 22 rushing attempts.
Missouri took a quick 14-0 lead on a pair of long runs Saturday, but had only three first downs and abandoned the run in a scoreless second half.
Wide receiver T.J. Moe said it was difficult to get open against Texas Tech’s physical man coverage.
“As a receiver you never want to be touched. Whether it’s right on the line or 15 yards downfield, you have to find a way to avoid contact,” Moe said. “You have to put that on us because Blaine can’t sit back there all day.
“He has a clock in his head and when he’s getting ready to throw and when we aren’t there it’s our fault.”
Michael Egnew, who entered the game ranked sixth in the nation with 63 receptions, had only three catches for 16 yards.
“It’s not anybody’s fault,” Gabbert said. “It’s not TJ’s fault, it’s not any of the receiver’s fault. It’s a combination of things and we just have to get things clicking.”