(STATS) -- Theres often nothing like a player capping the season with his best performance.South Dakota States Dallas Brown is taking his senior season to the postseason, but Howards Anthony Philyaw, Western Carolinas Detrez Newsome and Towsons Aidan ONeill must be thrilled to know they have something to build on for 2017 -- though it might be difficult considering their high performances this past Saturday.The four players were named Monday as the STATS FCS National Players of the Week for games played Nov. 17-19.NATIONAL OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEKAnthony Philyaw, Howard, RB, R-Jr., 6-1, 205, Los AngelesAfter missing two seasons, Philyaw came back strong this year, capping the campaign with a school-record 281 rushing yards and two touchdowns in Howards 26-21 win over Delaware State in the MEAC. Philyaw went head-to-head with Delaware State freshman Mike Waters (228 rushing, two touchdowns) and was a little better on a workhorse total of 36 carries. His 45-yard touchdown run in the first quarter put him over 1,000 yards for the season and he went on to score again on a 23-yard run. His second 200-yard game of the season lifted him to 1,230 for the season.Honorable Mention: Kendell Anderson, RB, William & Mary; Jeremiah Briscoe, QB, Sam Houston State; Chase Edmonds, RB, Fordham; Trey Green, QB, Prairie View A&M; Darius Hammond, RB, Charleston Southern; Manusamoa Luuga, RB, UC Davis; John Russ, QB, Mercer; Sam Straub, QB, Southern Illinois; Alek Torgersen, QB, Penn; Rylan Wells, QB, JacksonvilleNATIONAL DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEKDallas Brown, South Dakota State, LB, R-Sr., 5-11, 200, Tucson, ArizonaBrown is a hybrid linebacker who uses his speed to make plays. He made plenty of them in South Dakota States 45-24 win at Northern Iowa, helping the Jackrabbits clinch their first Missouri Valley Football Conference title and an automatic bid to the FCS playoffs. He had seven tackles (three solo), including a sack, forced a forced fumble, intercepted a pass at the goal line late in the first half and applied pressure that led to a teammates 65-yard interception return for a touchdown in the closing minutes.Honorable Mention: Abdullah Anderson, DT, Bucknell; Rayshan Clark, CB, Albany; Kendal Franklin, DE, McNeese; Patrick Kenney, LB, Bryant; Jarius Moore, LB, Texas Southern; Jonathan Peterson, DE, San DiegoNATIONAL SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYER OF THE WEEKDetrez Newsome, Western Carolina, RB/KR, Jr., 5-10, 210, Raeford, North CarolinaNewsome was a one-man wrecking crew as the Catamounts were competitive in a 44-31 loss to SEC member South Carolina. He amassed a school-record 365 all-purpose yards, including a Southern Conference-record 240 on seven kickoff returns. He scored on a 93-yard return, one of his two touchdowns as he rushed for 115 yards and a score to surpass the 1,000-yard mark for the second consecutive season. The FCS leader in all-purpose yards also had a 10-yard reception.Honorable Mention: Miles Bergner, PK/P, South Dakota; Alex Chadwick, PK, Houston Baptist; J.J. Jerman, PK, East Tennessee State; Jonathan Martin, P, Albany; Xavier Nelson, KR, Duquesne; Jalen Rima, RS, Northern IowaNATIONAL FRESHMAN PLAYER OF THE WEEKAidan ONeill, Towson, PK, Fr., 6-1, 182, New Paltz, New YorkTowson took momentum into the offseason when ONeill kicked a 55-yard field goal on the final play of the Tigers 32-31 CAA Football win at Rhode Island. The Tigers first game-winning kick since 2011 was the second-longest field goal in school history. ONeill tied the school record with four field goals as he also converted from 19, 45 and 37 yards. The Tigers were only 4-7 this season, but ONeills game-winner provided a three-game winning streak.Honorable Mention: Joe Alessi, RB, Youngstown State; Kenji Bahar, QB, Monmouth; Marlon Bridges, S, Jacksonville State; Cole Johnson, QB, James Madison; Earl Harrison, RB, Tennessee State; Josh Hill, LB, Montana State; Kurt Rawlings, QB, Yale; Mike Waters, RB, Delaware State; Kentell Williams, RB/RS, Austin PeayYeezy Canada Online . The Montreal Canadiens announced on Friday that the veteran forward will return to the teams line-up on Saturday night when the Habs visit the Nashville Predators. Cheap Yeezy Shoes Wholesale . Catch all the action on TSN2 at 11pm et/8pm pt. The nine-time Big 12 champion Jayhawks are positioning themselves for another title, as they have run out to a flawless 6-0 mark in conference play thus far. http://www.wholesaleyeezycanada.com/ . Most important, perhaps, it went off without a hitch. Organizers poked a little fun at the now-infamous opening ceremony gaffe that saw only four out of five snowflakes open up into rings, leaving the Olympics logo one ring short. Adidas Yeezy Canada . The lawyers filed a 33-page amended complaint Tuesday in federal court in Manhattan, expanding on the suit originally filed Oct. 3 in New York Supreme Court. Arbitrator Fredric Horowitz last week refused to compel Selig to testify in the grievance, and Rodriguez then walked out of the hearing without testifying. Wholesale Yeezy Canada . The 20-year-old Pelicans big man glanced up and smiled widely at the well-wishers -- a fitting end to a day he wont soon forget. Davis responded to his selection earlier in the day as a Western Conference All-Star with 26 points and 10 rebounds, and the New Orleans Pelicans overcame a 10-point fourth-quarter deficit to defeat the Minnesota Timberwolves 98-91 on Friday night.LAS VEGAS -- Former light heavyweight world title challenger Isaac Chilemba was trying to bounce back from two losses in a row to remain relevant in the division, while Oleksandr Gvozdyk, a 2012 Olympic bronze medalist, was trying to brandish his credentials as a rising contender.It was Gvozdyk who accomplished his goal, forcing Chilemba to retire on his stool after the eighth round with a right elbow injury Saturday night on the Sergey Kovalev-Andre Ward undercard at T-Mobile Arena.Left jab, left hook and straight rights to the body really hurt him, Gvozdyk said. People dont think I have a lot of fights, but I had over 250 amateur fights. I just broke him down.Gvozdyk (12-0, 10 KOs), trained by Robert Garcia, is close friends with Olympic teammate and junior lightweight world titleholder Vasyl Lomachenko, who was ringside. Gvozdyk?appeared on his way to a victory even before Chilembas injury. The Ukrainian fighter was steadily breaking down the slower, smaller Chilemba with precise punches and pesky jabs to the face.?Gvozdyk had Chilemba (24-3-2, 10 KOs) in deep trouble in the fourth round, forcing him to the ropes and unloading a sustained flurry that had referee Jay Nady looking closely.A new star was born tonight, said matchmaker Brad Abdul Goodman of Top Rank, which promotes Gvozdyk.Chilemba, 29, a native of Malawi who fights out of South Africa, was working with Roy Jones Jr. as his trainer for the first time, but the pairing did not seem to stoke much fire in Chilemba.I am devastated, Chilemba said. If I hadnt hurt my right arm in the third round, it would have been a completely different outcome. I was in an incredible amount of pain from the third round through the rest of the fight.Chilemba was coming off a decision loss to Kovalev in a July world title fight.Perez-Hooker a drawJunior welterweight Maurice Mighty Mo Hooker predicted he would knock out former lightweight world titleholder Darleys Perez, but did not stop him. Instead, Hooker came away with a shocking draw in a fight Perez appeared to clearly?win.One judge had it 97-93 for Perez, one had it 97-93 for Hooker and one had it 95-95.Perez, 33, of Colombia, lost his lightweight world title in November 2015 by fifth-round body-shot knockout in a rematch of a draw with Anthony Crolla. Perez won his next fight and then moved up in weight to face Hooker, a 27-year-old prospect from Dallas for whom promoter Roc Nation Sports had high hopes.But Perez (33-2-2, 21 KOs) seemingly upended those expectations by befuddling Hooker, a friend and sparring partner of unified junior welterweight champion Terence Crawford.Perez, who wobbled Hooker (21-0-3, 16 KOs) with a left hand in the ninth round, came forward throughout the fight and let his hands go while Hooker backed up constantly and rarely landed anything solid.Stevens wins decision against De La RosaMiddleweight Curtis Stevens (29-5, 21 KOs) won a unanimous decision against James De La Rosa (23-5, 13 KOs) in a fight that began with a lot of action and then slowed to a crawl. Stevens won 98-90, 96-92 and 96-92.I give myself a C-minus. Could have thrown my jab a little more, Stevens said. I am glad I got the W but I am a little disappointed in myself. The jab was good, but I could have popped that s--- a little more. Hurt my left hand in the fourth round. Hes got a hard-ass head. But I am glad I got the win.Stevens, 31, a powerful puncher from Brooklyn, New York, took control right away and dropped De La Rosa with a left hand behind the ear with 20 seconds left in the openinng round.dddddddddddd. Things did not get any better for De La Rosa, 29, in the second round as Stevens opened a cut over his left eye.They engaged in a ferocious exchange in the third round in which both landed clean shots, and De La Rosas left eye began to swell.Stevens appeared to have De La Rosa in trouble in those early rounds but could not finish him, and then the pace slowed down and the fight meandered on. De La Rosa, of Harlingen, Texas,?appeared to have some good moments in the later part of the fight as Stevens began to tire, but could not put any punches together to do any damage.Referee Russell Mora docked Stevens?one point for a low blow in the eighth round.Stevens, who lost a world title challenge by eighth-round knockout to Gennady Golovkin in 2013, won his second fight of the year and, coincidentally, both were at T-Mobile Arena; he knocked out Patrick Teixeira in the second round in May on the Canelo Alvarez-Amir Khan card, the first boxing event to be held at the new arena.De La Rosa lost his third fight in a row.I dont have any comments, De La Rosa said. People saw what it was.Darmani Rock (5-0, 4 KOs), a 20-year-old heavyweight prospect from Philadelphia, rolled to a nondescript decision win against Brice Ritani-Coe (4-5-1, 3 KOs), 30, of Las Vegas. The 6-foot-4, 247-pound Rock, who won the 2015 National Golden Gloves and U.S. National Amateur titles, won 40-36, 40-36 and 39-35.Toledo, Ohio, featherweight Tyler McCreary (12-0, 6 KOs), 23, won an unpopular majority decision against Vincent Jennings (5-3-1, 4 KOs), 32, of Grand Rapids, Michigan. Jennings lost his third fight in a row, but as far as the crowd was concerned he won the fight, which featured very little action; boos rained down when the scores were announced, 59-55 and 58-56 for McCreary and 57-57.It was a tough fight, McCreary said. Jennings is crafty for his size. Hes powerful too. But I know I took him every round. I had height and speed all to my advantage. Im pleased with my performance. I dug deep. It was a great learning experience. Next time, I will be more prepared.Junior welterweight prospect Sonny Fredrickson (15-0, 9 KOs), 22, of Toledo, Ohio, outfought Gabriel Deluc (11-2, 2 KOs), 26, of Boston, in a competitive and entertaining eight-rounder. Fredrickson, who put together a lot of solid combinations and was on the attack for most of the fight, got the nod 78-74, 78-74 and 77-75.It was a hard, tough fight, Fredrickson said. I think I took the edge during the middle rounds. But I also had a strong beginning and finished strong at the end. It was a good fight and a tough opponent that will allow me to grow and build.Middleweight Bakhram Murtazaliev (7-0, 5 KOs), 33, of Russia, blasted Uzbekistan native Botirsher Obidov (6-1-1, 2 KOs), 24, who is based in Kissimmee, Florida, via a second-round KO. Murtazaliev was ruthless, dropping Obidov hard three times in the second round, including a powerful right hand on the chin that sent him to the mat as referee Vic Drakulich waved off the fight without a count at 2 minutes, 52 seconds.Middleweight Meiirim Nursultanov (1-0, 0 KOs), a 23-year-old Kazakhstan native fighting out of Oxnard, California, made his professional debut and laid a beating on Henry Beckford (4-6, 1 KO), 21, of Coram, New York, in a shutout decision win. Nursultanov attacked Beckford with right hands constantly and won 60-54 on all three scorecards. ' ' '