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Cardinals finish off sweep of Houston with 5-4 win

Carlos Beltran appears to be getting his stroke back. Good timing for the St. Louis Cardinals’ final playoff push.

Beltran snapped a sixth-inning tie with a two-run, pinch-hit double and Allen Craig hit a three-run homer, powering the Cardinals to a 5-4 victory Thursday that held their cushion in the NL wild-card race.

The Cardinals lead Milwaukee by 2 1/2 games for the second wild-card spot with 12 games remaining. Los Angeles, which lost 4-1 at Washington, is three back.

St. Louis has won four in a row, capitalizing on a break in the schedule. There’s more sub-.500 opposition ahead in the final trip of the year, with three in Chicago beginning Friday and three more in Houston.

”Our vibe’s four games better,” manager Mike Matheny said. ”That’s about it. We’re really trying to enjoy each one and realize how much we’re putting on each game as a club. Not looking forward to anything except the next one.”

The urgency was reflected in Matheny’s decision to go to Beltran, slumping much of the second half, so early.

”They told me if a situation came up where guys were in scoring position, they were going to use me,” Beltran said. ”So I’m not surprised. The manager is the one making the calls and I just have to be ready when he needs me.”

Beltran’s double put St. Louis up 5-3, rewarding Jaime Garcia (5-7) for keeping it close. They took care of business against the lowly Astros, who absorbed their 102nd loss while leading for a single inning in the three-game series.

The Cardinals were 6-0 at home against Houston, their first season series sweep in St. Louis since 1996.

Houston did its best to hang tough.

”It definitely was a good series for us,” said Justin Maxwell, who had an RBI double and two nice catches in right field. ”We know what they’re playing for over there. We’re not going to hand anything to anyone.”

”We’re going to see them again next week, so hopefully, we can take some games from them,” he said.

Bud Norris (5-13) allowed five runs on five hits and five walks in 5 1-3 innings for Houston after getting sent back to the team hotel Wednesday night because of flu-like symptoms. He’s 0-12 with a 6.34 ERA in 18 starts since May 21 but with a lot of hard luck, too. He’s had eight quality starts in his last 13 outings.

”I wasn’t very good all around,” Norris said. ”I gave it everything I had. It’s been a tough couple of days for me.”

The Cardinals topped 3 million in attendance for the ninth consecutive season and 16th time in franchise history with paid attendance of 34,788.

Craig also doubled and has three homers and 15 RBIs in 11 games against the Astros this year. He’s a career .412 hitter against the Astros with six homers and 24 RBIs in 20 games.

”He comes through in those big situations,” Matheny said. ”He can just flat hit, that’s all there is to it.”

Jason Motte finished for his 38th save in 45 chances and third of the series after the Astros tested the setup men.

Fernando Salas struck out Jose Altuve and pinch hitter Brett Wallace with the bases loaded to end the eighth after Mitchell Boggs and Marc Rzepczynski combined to issue three walks. Edward Mujica surrendered an RBI single to Brandon Barnes in the seventh.

The biggest worry going forward is overloading the bullpen. Motte has pitched in the last five games, and Boggs, the setup man, has worked in three straight since coming back from a minor back ailment.

”Hopefully I’ll feel pretty good tomorrow and I can get back out there,” Boggs said. ”It was just one of those days when they were being pretty patient.

”I certainly felt like I could have gotten a ground ball out of the next guy.”

Norris, who entered the game 4-2 with a 2.93 ERA in St. Louis, walked Daniel Descalso and Pete Kozma with one out in the sixth and was lifted after throwing 111 pitches. Both scored easily on Beltran’s drive off Wesley Wright to the base of the wall in left-center.

Beltran was batting .296 with an NL-leading 65 RBIs at the All-Star break but is hitting just .229 with 24 RBIs since while dealing with a sore right knee and sore right hand. He’s begun to pick it up lately, going 9 for 19 during a six-game hitting streak.

”I’m fine, brother,” Beltran said. ”There’s no excuses. Right now, these days there’s not many ballplayers feeling 100 percent, so I’m good to go.”

Garcia is 2-5 with a 5.67 ERA in 10 road starts, but 3-2 with a 2.84 in eight home starts.

— Associated Press —

Bearcat volleyball team defeats Fort Hays State, 3-1

The Northwest Missouri State volleyball team knocked off a gritty Fort Hays State team, 3-1, Wednesday evening in their toughest conference match yet this season to remain undefeated in conference play.

The game went back and forth through the first two sets with Northwest taking them both. Abby Graves helped give the Bearcats momentum throughout the game. She had key kills in the second set to help the Bearcats hang on finishing with 16 kills and three service aces in the win.

The Bearcats won 25-20, 25-22, 22-25, 25-23 to move to 8-4 overall and 4-0 in MIAA play. Fort Hays fell to 8-4 on the year and 2-2 in league play with the loss.

Brooke Bartosh led the team with 19 kills and a .421 attack percentage. Together setters, Dallas Gardner and Kirsten Hudgens totaled 49 assists to pace the offense.

In the third set, Fort Hays went up 9-3 to start the set. The Bearcats could not recover from the deficit as the Tigers took their only set of the match. Fort Hays was led by Sara Hewson and Jenna Ulrich who each totaled 11 kills.

Northwest regained its momentum in the fourth set as the two teams traded points. Graves and Bartosh, who was two kills shy of her career high, rallied the Bearcats to finish off the Tigers for the 25-23 win.

Tori Beckman totaled 21 digs against the Tigers. Going into Wednesday’s game Beckman was ranked second in the conference with 215 digs.

As a team the Tigers were outstanding defensively as they totaled 12 blocks. Kayla Zogelman accounted for six of the blocks. Zogelman also led the Tigers in assists with 29 for the night.

Northwest takes the weekend off before continuing its home stand against perennial league power and nationally ranked Washburn, Tuesday, Sept. 25 at Bearcat Arena. Tipoff from Maryville is set for 7 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

Chen, Gordon lead Royals past White Sox Wednesday

Bruce Chen had already pitched out of trouble each of the first three innings when the Royals left-hander issued a pair of walks and served up a base hit to Alex Rios in the fourth.

The bases were loaded, there was nobody out and the White Sox – one of the hottest teams in baseball and winners of five straight – were poised to deliver the crushing blow.

It never happened.

Never even came close.

Chen managed to retire three straight batters without a ball getting out of the infield, and then carried on into the seventh inning. Billy Butler’s sacrifice fly and a two-run double by Alex Gordon was enough to give the Royals a 3-0 victory over the AL Central leaders Wednesday night.

”Bruce Chen was right on top of his game,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”I told him after he was done, ‘You did a great job of pitching yourself into trouble in the fourth inning and even a better job of pitching yourself out of it.’ Bruce did a phenomenal job.”

Chen (11-12) scattered five hits and three walks over 6 2-3 innings to win for just the second time in six starts. The crafty veteran also stranded a runner on second in the sixth before getting some help from reliever Kelvin Herrera to escape more trouble in the seventh.

Herrera then pitched around two base runners in the eighth, and Greg Holland yielded a two-out double in the ninth before finishing for his 14th save in 17 chances.

”We didn’t panic,” Chen said. ”We stuck to our game plan.”

Alcides Escobar finished with three hits, all of them off Chicago ace Chris Sale (17-7), and the Royals who staved off official elimination for one more day. The White Sox (81-67) had their lead in the division trimmed to two games over the Detroit Tigers.

”This one stinks and you have to move on,” White Sox manager Robin Ventura said.

Chicago will be happy to move on from playing the Royals and start rooting for them.

Kansas City improved to 8-2 in their last 10 meetings by evening the three-game series, and a win in the finale Thursday night would make the Royals 6-1 in the teams’ last seven series.

They could become Chicago’s biggest ally down the stretch, though. Kansas City plays seven of its final 13 games against second-place Detroit, beginning with a four-game series Monday.

”We’re going to have to win no matter what. We have to take care of our business,” Ventura said. ”It’s difficult when you play like this.”

The White Sox wasted another strong start by Sale by going 1 for 12 with runners in scoring position, stranding four at third base, four more at second and three at first.

Chicago also went 0 for 5 with runners in scoring position in winning the series opener.

Meanwhile, the Royals scratched out a run in the third on a sacrifice fly by Butler, and then bore down behind Eric Hosmer’s leadoff double and Escobar’s intentional walk in the seventh.

After a brief visit at the mound, Sale remained in the game to face Gordon, and he walloped a pitch to the wall in left. It appeared that Viciedo would have room to make the catch, but the ball fell onto the track for a double, allowing two runs to cross and giving Kansas City a 3-0 lead.

”Our approach is not to try to do too much against Sale with his kind of stuff, his deceptive delivery,” Gordon said. ”Just stay simple and make something happen.”

The three runs were enough to give the 23-year-old Sale his third loss against Kansas City – he’s only lost four other times this season. He’s also just 2-5 over his last seven road starts.

”Chen came out and threw as well as he’s ever pitched tonight against us,” Sale said, his voice barely above a whisper. ”He out-pitched me tonight.”

— Associated Press —

Northwest Cross Country teams now ranked in latest poll

For the first time during the 2012 campaign both the Northwest Missouri State men’s and women’s cross country teams are ranked by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) poll released Wednesday.

The Bearcat men move into the rankings for the first time at No. 30 after a fourth place finish at the Woody Greeno Invitational last week. Northwest held steady in the Central Region rankings sitting at No. 6 which were released Tuesday.

Four MIAA teams join the Bearcats in the top 35 coaches’ poll, paced by Missouri Southern at No. 12. Central Missouri stands at No. 20, with Southwest Baptist at No. 22 and Fort Hays State at No. 26.

On the women’s side the Bearcats slipped two spots to No. 24 in the national rankings. In the Central Region rankings the Northwest women also saw their rankings slip one spot to No. 6 after opening the season at No. 5.

The Bearcat women are joined by Missouri Southern at No. 14 and Pittsburg State at No. 17 as the only other MIAA teams ranked ahead of Northwest. Southwest Baptist sits at No. 26 giving the league four teams in the USTFCCCA poll.

The Bearcats take the weekend off before heading north for the Roy Griak Invitational in Minneapolis, Minn. Saturday, Sept. 29.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

St. Louis shuts out Houston to extend Wild Card lead

Lance Lynn learned a lot from his 18-day stint in the St. Louis bullpen.

Lynn, making his second start since an Aug. 25 demotion, tossed 6 1-3 innings and David Freese and Yadier Molina both hit their 20th home run of the season to lead the Cardinals to a 5-0 victory over the Houston Astros on Wednesday night.

The Cardinals, who have won seven straight against Houston, moved two games ahead of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the race for the second wild card in the National League. Milwaukee is 2 1-2 games back.

St. Louis has won three straight for the first time since a four-game streak from Aug. 21-24.

The Cardinals have five players with at least 20 homers for the first time in franchise history. Carlos Beltran (29), Matt Holliday (27) and Allen Craig (21) already hit the milestone.

Lynn (16-7) allowed three hits, struck out five and walked two in a 102-pitch stint. It was his second successive strong effort since posting a 6.56 ERA in five August starts.

”I got away from what I was all about early on in the season,” Lynn said. ”I got off track, and tried to start nibbling and throwing breaking pitches.

”Now, I’m going right after hitters and it’s making all my stuff better.”

Lynn is 2-0 with 12 strikeouts, four walks and one earned run in 12 1-3 innings since his return.

Lynn, who leads a talented staff in wins, retired nine straight batters after Jose Altuve’s double to start the game. The All-Star was removed from the rotation after an Aug. 24 outing in which he gave up four earned in two innings at Cincinnati. He made six appearances in the bullpen before returning to the rotation last Thursday at Los Angeles. He gave up one run and five hits in six innings of a 2-1 win.

Manager Mike Matheny believes Lynn has returned to the rotation a smarter and more aggressive pitcher.

”He didn’t go down to the bullpen and sulk, he tried to make himself better,” Matheny said. ”I think he learned a lot about his demeanor. He shortened up his mechanics, really tightened everything up.”

Molina said Lynn was at his early season form. Lynn was 8-1 through the first two months of the season.

”He was outstanding, he was keeping the ball down and he was aggressive,” Molina said.

Freese hit a two-run homer off Lucas Harrell (10-10) in the second inning. Harrell, winless in six starts, gave up three runs and five hits in 5 2-3 innings. He struck out seven and walked one.

”They have some guys that can hit the ball and you just want to work hard and try and get through the game,” Harrell said.

Craig led off the second with a single to set the stage for Freese’s shot. The Cardinals are 16-3 when Freese homers.

Molina homered in the fourth with one out to push St. Louis’ lead to 3-0.

The 20 homers for Freese and Molina are both career highs.

”If you are a guy that’s trying to solidify himself, that’s the number that I think everybody else looks at,” Freese said of the 20-homer mark. ”It’s nice to get to that number. We’ve got a good number of guys that have 20 or more. It’s fun to be a part of.”

Molina was pleased to get to the magical plateau.

”I can’t lie, it’s feels so good,” he said.

Houston interim manager Tony DeFrancesco was impressed with Molina’s game-calling skills as well as his new-found power.

”He’s proven that he’s one of the best players in the game right now both offensively and defensively,” he said.

Jason Motte recorded his 37th save in 44 opportunities. Motte entered the game in the ninth inning with the bases loaded and one out, and ended it by striking out Chris Synder and Jimmy Paredes. Mitchell Boggs had struck out the side in the eighth on 12 pitches.

The Cardinals tacked on two runs in the eighth on successive hits by Jon Jay, Beltran and Holliday, and a sacrifice fly by Craig.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City comes up short against White Sox

Gavin Floyd is healthy again and hoping to help the Chicago White Sox get back to the playoffs.

Floyd pitched seven crisp innings, Alex Rios hit a tiebreaking homer in the seventh and the White Sox beat the Kansas City Royals 3-2 on Tuesday night for their fifth consecutive win.

Alejandro De Aza and Gordon Beckham also went deep for AL Central-leading Chicago, which maintained a three-game advantage over Detroit and improved to 6-10 against the Royals. Chicago had lost seven of eight against Kansas City.

Floyd (10-10) gave up two runs in the first inning and nothing after that. He allowed five hits, walked one and struck out three, throwing 52 strikes in 78 pitches.

The 6-foot-6 right-hander was making his second start since coming off the disabled list after being sidelined with an elbow flexor strain. He also missed time earlier in the year with right elbow tendinitis.

”I felt good out there,” he said. ”I just wanted to make as few pitches out there and let the defense work. It’s great especially after sitting for 15 days and more than that before. It’s nice to get back out there and just be part of the team and contribute.”

Floyd reached double-figures in victories for the fifth consecutive season as the White Sox (81-66) moved 15 games above .500.

”We’re no way content,” Floyd said. ”We’re content in the place that we are, but there’s still a lot of baseball left. It’s fun to be in the position we’re at. We’ve just got to keep pushing.”

De Aza drove Luke Hochevar’s second pitch over the wall in right for his eighth homer of the season. De Aza had been slumping, hitless in his previous nine at-bat and 2-for-21 in his previous five games.

First-year manager Robin Ventura did not play the outfielder in the past two games, but thought the timing was right to get him back in the lineup.

”I know what I’m doing,” Ventura joked. ”He looked out of synch in Minnesota.”

Hochevar (8-14), who is 1-5 in his last nine starts, allowed just one single the next four innings before Beckham led off the sixth with his 16th home run. Beckham is hitting .333 with four home runs and 14 RBIs in his past 17 games.

”He’s in a better position to hit,” Ventura said. ”He’s more confident. He’s getting his hands back and getting through it. He’s hit some homers, but for me he’s keeping the ball on a line a little bit more than he has all year long.”

The White Sox upped their home run total to 198, which ranks second in the majors. They have 13 homers in their past 14 road games.

”I’m not going to be critical how we get them,” Ventura said. ”This is a big ballpark. You’ve got to find a way to get some runs other than just sitting back and waiting for a home run. I’m glad we hit them, but this isn’t a ballpark you can sit back and do that.”

Rios’ 24th homer came with one out in the seventh and matched his career high. Rios also played a key role in Chicago’s 5-4 win over Detroit on Monday when he broke up a potential double play with a hard slide that led to an errant throw that allowed the tying and go-ahead runs to score.

Hochevar allowed seven hits in seven innings. He struck out four and walked none.

Kansas City got off to a fast start when Billy Butler hit a two-run single in the first inning to give him a career-high 97 RBIs.

The Royals did not have a baserunner after Jeff Francoeur’s fourth-inning double.

”He (Floyd) settled in really nice,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”They retired our last 16 batters. We had trouble centering anything up against them.”

Matt Thornton retired all four batters he faced. Addison Reed got the final two outs for his 28th save in 32 chances.

— Associated Press —

Lohse wins 15th as Cardinals defeat Astros 4-1

St. Louis Cardinals manager Mike Matheny believes Kyle Lohse belongs in the NL Cy Young conversation.

Helping the World Series champions get to the postseason will do for now.

The right-hander threw seven scoreless innings for his 15th victory and contributed an RBI double as the Cardinals beat the Houston Astros 4-1 Tuesday night to stay in front for the second NL wild card.

”He was in position to have many more wins than 15 right now,” Matheny said. ”He’s thriving on being that guy for us, to really set the bar for the rest of the starters.

”If we would have been able to hold some of the leads that he had, there’s no question he’d be right at the top of that mix,” Matheny added.

Fernando Abad (0-5) had a career-best six strikeouts in the Astros’ 100th loss. They’re 8-8 this month under interim manager Tony DeFrancesco and need nine wins in the final 14 games to avoid topping last season’s franchise-record 106 losses.

DeFrancesco is hindered by a roster filled with prospects.

”When I got the job it was already where it was at,” DeFrancesco said. ”We know what’s on the field. We know what direction the team is going, and we’re excited about our future.”

Excited about Wednesday, too.

”We know what’s on their mind over there, to get that second wild-card spot,” cleanup man Justin Maxwell said. ”If we can do our job and win games, we can definitely be the spoilers.”

Daniel Descalso got a key early RBI and Jon Jay had two hits and two RBIs for the Cardinals, coming off a 2-5 trip. But they have a favorable upcoming schedule with the next eight against lowly Houston and Chicago. With 14 games to play, the defending World Series champions are 1 1/2 games ahead of the Dodgers, rained out at Washington, and 2 1/2 games ahead of the Brewers.

Lohse (15-3) matched his season best for victories set in 2008 with St. Louis, on his fourth attempt while stranding two runners in the third and seventh. A .281 career hitter entering the season, he raised his average this year to .100 with his third RBI on a bouncer over drawn-in third baseman Matt Dominguez.

It was hit first extra-base hit since a double Sept. 19, 2011, at Philadelphia off Roy Halladay.

”That looked like a Hall of Fame swing, didn’t it?” Lohse joked. ”It says .100 up there and I’m just glad it’s there instead of lower.

”A positive thing is when it’s in the 80s it doesn’t go down much every time you make an out.”

Due for free agency after the season, Lohse leads the majors with a winning percentage of .833 and is among the National League leaders with a 2.71 ERA.

”It’s easy to just concentrate on what I’m doing,” Lohse said. ”I try to take that focus every fifth day. If I’m worried about numbers, what could have been, or … contracts, none of that matters to me.”

Abad allowed three runs in five innings, the longest of his five career starts – all this year – and is 1-10 with a 5.12 ERA in parts of three seasons with Houston. Brett Wallace had an RBI single off Mitchell Boggs in the eighth.

The Cardinals had four extra-base hits, three of them in succession with one out in the fifth. Pete Kozma tripled, Lohse doubled and Jay doubled to make it 3-0.

They missed a chance for more when Carlos Beltran struck out and Jay was thrown out at third. It was the second time one of St. Louis’ best hitters whiffed in the clutch and Astros catcher Jason Castro turned it into a double play. Matt Holliday struck out and Jay was thrown out at second to end the first.

Yadier Molina singled with one out in the second and scored on a two-out single by Descalso, who had been batting just .104 with runners in scoring position (8 for 77) on the year and was 1 for 16 on the trip. Descalso batted .294 with runners in scoring position as a rookie.

”We saw last year that guy can produce in those situations,” Matheny said. ”It’s just a matter of trusting himself, getting a couple to fall in for in for him and hopefully he goes on a tear.”

Jason Motte worked the ninth for his 36th save in 43 chances.

— Associated Press —

Griffons remain No. 5 in D2Football.com poll

The Missouri Western football stayed at No. 5 this week in the D2Football.com media poll which was released on Tuesday morning.

The Griffons are 3-0 for the fourth time under Jerry Partridge after defeating MIAA newcomer Nebraska-Kearney 38-14 last week in Spratt Stadium.

This week the Griffons hit the road for the first time in 2012 traveling to Hays, Kan. to take on the Fort Hays State University Tigers.

Kickoff is set for 7:00 p.m. from Lewis Field Stadium. Last season the Griffons defeated the Tigers 55-17 in Hays on the last game of the regular season.

The game can be heard on the Griffon Sports Network (KFEQ 680 AM & KMRN 1360 AM) with pregame beginning at 6:00 p.m.

Click here to view the D2Football.com Top 25 poll.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Western women’s golfers finish 6th at Wildwood Lodge Invite

The Missouri Western women’s golf squad finished in 6th place in the 16 team field at the Wildwood Lodge Invitational which was hosted by Concordia-St. Paul. The event was played at the Tartan Park Golf Course in Lake Elmo, Minn. The Griffons fired a two day total of 641 (321-34) finishing three strokes back of Drury 658 (326-332) and seven strokes back of Concordia-St. Paul 653 (319-334). The winner of the event was Augustana (SD) with a 620 (305-315) four strokes better than Grand Valley State 624 (316-308).

The Griffons were led by freshman Callie Wilson as she finished in a tie for 7th with a 155 (75-80). Natalie Bird finished in a tie for 10th firing a 158 (78-80). Shelby Stone, Casi Webb and Darcy Smith finished with 174 (84-90), 174 (84-90) and 177 (87-90) respectively. Anna Kloeppel played as an individual finising with a 179 (82-87).

The winner of the event was Kelly Hartigan of Grand Valley State firing a two round total of 149 (76-73) which was one stroke better than Emily Kvidera of Augustana (SD).

The Griffons return to action on September 22 and 23 when they return to Minnesota to take part in the Southwest Minnesota State University Invite. The event is being held in Marshall, Minn. at the Marshall Golf Club.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri Western football moves up to No. 7 in AFCA Top 25

The Missouri Western Griffons moved up one spot from No. 8 to No. 7 in the latest AFCA top 25 Division II coaches poll which was released on Monday.

Missouri Western will hit the road for the first time this season on Saturday, September 22 when they travel to Hays, Kan. to take on the Fort Hays State Tigers. Kickoff is set for 7:00 pm in Lewis Field Stadium. Last season the Griffons defeated the Tigers last season 55-17 in Hays on November 12th, 2011 in Hays, Kan.

The Griffons jumped six spots after shutting down MIAA newcomer Nebraska-Kearney 38-14 last Saturday in St. Joseph. MWSU is 3-0 and have been ranked in the top 25 in the last 11 polls and have received votes in 29 of the last 33 coaches polls.

Under Partridge, this is the fourth time the Griffons have been ranked in the top-10 and fourth time that MWSU has started 3-0.

Click here to view the AFCA Top 25 poll.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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