KENNESAW, Ga. -- Austin Herink passed for 214 yards and rushed for a touchdown, and JJ Jerman kicked a 24-yard field goal in double overtime as East Tennessee State topped Kennesaw State 20-17 in the season opener for both teams on Saturday.Herinks 1-yard score gave East Tennessee a 17-10 lead in the first overtime, but Chandler Burks found Justin Sumpter for a 22-yard touchdown on fourth-and-18 to tie the game and keep Kennesaw States hopes alive.The Owls got the ball first in double overtime, but Jordan Genovese missed a 30-yard field goal. East Tennessee drove 18 yards on five plays, and Jermans 24-yard kick split the uprights for the walk-off win.East Tennessee led 3-0, 10-7 and 17-10, but Kennesaw State matched scores each time.Kennesaw States Trey White passed for 82 yards and rushed for 68 yards and a touchdown.Fred Mcgriff Jersey . Ferrer, trying to win his fourth title on Mexican soil, will next play South Africas Kevin Anderson, who eliminated American Sam Querrey,7-6 (2), 6-4. Also Wednesday, Gilles Simon (6) of France beat Donald Young of the United States 6-4, 6-3, Ukraines Alexandr Dolgopolov downed Frenchman Jeremy Chardy 6-3, 6-4 and Croatias Ivo Karlovic defeated Dudi Sela of Israel 7-6 (4), 6-2. Billy McKinney Jersey .C. -- Calgarys Kevin Koe did it the hard way again. https://www.cheapbluejays.com/2086h-david-wells-jersey-blue-jays.html .C. at the helm of the top team in the Eastern Conference. His tenure as the GM in Vancouver was all too brief. Though he led the Canucks to what was then a franchise record-shattering campaign in just his second season, Nonis was gone and replaced one year later. Willie Upshaw Blue Jays Jersey .com) - Rafael Nadal, Andy Murray and Roger Federer were easy first-round winners Tuesday at the Australian Open. Alex Gonzalez Jersey . But what about the officials? Every sport has officials and they also have stories about hard work and sacrifice but their accomplishments are seldom recognized by anyone outside their inner circle.SEATTLE -- An assistant football coach who was fired from a Washington state high school for praying on the field after games sued the school district Tuesday, saying officials violated his religious rights.The lawsuit filed by the First Liberty Institute, a Texas-based legal organization that focuses on religious freedom cases, wants Joe Kennedy restored to his coaching job with the varsity team at Bremerton High School, and it asks the U.S. District Court in Tacoma to rule that his postgame prayers are allowed.Kennedy had prayed before and after games, sometimes joined by students, since 2008. The Bremerton School District said it did not want to be seen as endorsing religious activity and asked him to stop when the practice came to its attention last year. But he persisted by silently taking a knee and praying.His case drew national attention. Dozens of lawmakers in the Congressional Prayer Caucus sent a letter to the superintendent expressing their support, and members of the Satanic Temple of Seattle caused an uproar when they arrived at a game clad in robes, makeup and rams horns after being invited by students and teachers.Coach Kennedy is not motivated to engage in private religious expression in order to proselytize or attract others to his religious faith, the lawsuit said. Instead, he offers a brief prayer of thanksgiving as part of a covenant he made with God before he started coaching at BHS.Because Kennedys prayeers were about the players, their hard work and sportsmanship, his sincerely held religious beliefs require him to pray on the field where the game was played, it added.ddddddddddddThe school district said in an emailed statement Tuesday that it was reviewing the complaint and declined to comment on its merits. But it previously argued that students could feel coerced to participate in religious activity when they see their coaches lead or endorse it.Officials said Kennedy was free to engage in religious activity that did not interfere with his public duties and was separate from students or non-demonstrative.Last fall, the district praised Kennedys contributions to football program but said his prayer posed a risk it would be held liable for violating the constitutional rights of students or others.Kennedys lawyers insist that the school district has misinterpreted prior court rulings concerning the religious rights of public employees. They also argued that it has taken no action against another football coach who has performed a Buddhist chant at the 50-yard line after games.The schools blanket ban on any demonstrative religious expression by Coach Kennedy violates the First Amendment, as does its decision to take adverse employment action against him because of such expression, the lawsuit said. ' ' '