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Mustangs fall in 10 innings at Sedalia

The St. Joseph Mustangs continued their road woes on Friday night at Sedalia as St. Joe’s summer college baseball team lost to the Bombers, 4-3, in 10 innings.

St. Joseph drops to 8-6 this season and 6-6 in the MINK League, but they are now just 1-5 away from Phil Welch Stadium.

Sedalia broke through against Mustangs’ starter Adam Maddox as they took a 3-0 lead in the fifth inning, but St. Joe rallied to force extra innings.

In the eighth, the Mustangs pulled to within one run as Emilio Villanueva doubled home Maxime LeFevre and Kris Koerper hit a sacrifice fly that scored Villanueva.

St. Joseph tied the game in the ninth inning as Kyle Richards came through with a two-out single that scored Jordan Guida to make it 3-3.

Carson Smith allowed the first three batter to reach in the tenth inning to load the bases, and then Sedalia’s Matt Skipper won the game with a single off Chris Green.

Maddox went eight innings and allowed three runs and five hits.  Smith is now 2-3 in relief this year.

St. Joseph is back at home Saturday for an exhibition game against a Missouri Western alumni team at 7:00 p.m.  You can listen to the game on ESPN 1550 AM.

Moustakas’ throw saves Royals in win at St. Louis

Mike Moustakas cut down Tyler Greene at the plate to end the game, capping a wild ninth inning and preserving the Kansas City Royals’ 3-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Friday night.

Greene reached on a two-out infield hit for his third single of the game, stole second and advanced on catcher Bryan Pena’s wild throw. He tried to score on another off-line throw by second baseman Chris Getz, but third baseman Moustakas made a strong throw to nip Greene at home.

The crazy finish came after Yadier Molina eased up on what he believed was an infield hit to start the St. Louis ninth. The catcher belatedly sped up after Alcides Escobar’s diving stop, and the shortstop made a strong throw to first as Molina banged his helmet with his hands.

Vin Mazzaro worked six scoreless innings and Jeff Francoeur had two RBIs for Kansas City, which matched its longest winning streak of the season with its fourth consecutive victory. Jarrod Dyson added two hits, a walk and an RBI.

Jonathan Broxton worked the ninth for his 16th save in 18 chances and No. 100 for his career.

The Royals also won four straight from May 12-15 at the Chicago White Sox and Texas.

Carlos Beltran had two hits and stole his 300th base in the second, becoming the first switch hitter in major league history with 300 home runs and 300 steals. Beltran then was caught stealing third by Mazzaro’s pickoff throw during the next at-bat.

The Royals trail the Interstate 70 rivalry 38-29, but are 14-14 in St. Louis.

The Cardinals’ Kyle Lohse (6-2) scattered 10 hits in seven innings, giving up three runs. Lohse has worked at least five innings in all but two of his 20 career starts against the Royals.

Mazzaro (3-1) blanked the opposition through six innings for the second time in three starts, needing just 80 pitches while keeping the Cardinals off balance. Matt Holliday was an easy out all three times after entering the game 4 for 5 with a homer and three RBIs against the 25-year-old right-hander.

Mazzaro was briefly visited by a trainer in his last inning, but no reason was given for his exit. He gave up four runs, three earned, in three-plus innings in a loss at Pittsburgh in his previous start.

Alcides Escobar doubled with two outs in the second and scored on Dyson’s infield hit, and Alex Gordon doubled leading off the third and scored on Francoeur’s single.

Francoeur added a sacrifice fly in the seventh as the Royals built a 3-0 lead.

Matt Adams had an RBI double and pinch-hitter Shane Robinson delivered a run-scoring single as the Cardinals jumped on Roman Colon in the bottom half to pull within one.

Colon, recalled from Triple-A Omaha on Thursday to bolster an overworked bullpen, made his first major league appearance since 2010 when he made the opening-day roster and appeared in just five games.

Dyson has three hits the last two games since ending an 0-for-13 slump.

— Associated Press —

MU’s Haith completes coaching staff with hiring of Dave Leitao

University of Missouri Head Basketball Coach Frank Haith announced the hiring of former Atlantic Coast Conference Coach of the Year Dave Leitao as an assistant coach on Friday. Leitao, who owns a pair of conference championships as a head coach at DePaul (2004) and Virginia (2007), has made 21 career postseason appearances, including 12 NCAA Tournaments highlighted by the 1999 National Championship as the Associate Head Coach at the University of Connecticut under Jim Calhoun.

The hiring of Leitao completes Haith’s coaching staff for the 2012-13 campaign.

Named the 2007 ACC Coach of the Year after leading the Cavaliers to an 11-5 league mark (21-11 overall) and a win in the NCAA Tournament, the 52-year-old comes to Mizzou after one season coaching the Maine Red Claws of the National Basketball Association’s Developmental League (NBDL). He led Maine to a three-game improvement last season, working with an organization that is the official minor league partner of the Boston Celtics, Philadelphia 76ers and the Charlotte Bobcats.

The New Bedford, Mass., native has 26 seasons of coaching experience under his belt. In the collegiate ranks he most recently spent four seasons at Virginia (2005-09) and three seasons at DePaul (2002-05). He has won 143 career games as a head coach, with three 20-win seasons, two league titles and six trips to postseason play.

“What a great complement to the University of Missouri to bring in a coach the caliber of Dave Leitao to work with our student-athletes,” Head Coach Frank Haith said. “Dave was a guy I really enjoyed competing against in the Atlantic Coast Conference because you knew his teams would play tough, physical and would really attack you every possession.

“Dave brings a wealth of knowledge to our program,” Haith continued. “He was mentored by one of college basketball’s all-time greats in Coach (Jim) Calhoun and he helped recruit key pieces for their NCAA Championship team in 1998-99. We are excited to have Dave join our family here at Mizzou.”

As Haith mentioned, Leitao was mentored into college basketball under the Hall of Famer, Calhoun, who recruited the 6-foot-7 forward to Northeastern University (1978-82). As a student-athlete Leitao’s teams went 79-34 overall and he was named team captain each of his final two seasons, each of which culminated with a trip to the NCAA Tournament. His 1982 Northeastern Huskies won a first round contest against St. Joseph’s before falling to third-seeded Villanova in triple overtime. Over his four seasons Leitao averaged 6.0 points and 5.4 rebounds and was known for his defensive intensity, which has fueled his coaching focus.

“I really appreciate this opportunity to join Coach Haith’s staff here at Missouri and can’t imagine a better place to continue my coaching career than here at Mizzou,” Dave Leitao said. “Missouri is a national program with tremendous success, incredible facilities, passionate fans and first class leadership of Mike Alden and Chancellor Brady Deaton. You see everything that has taken place on this campus over recent years and you can’t help but to be excited about the momentum we have going forward.”

Leitao began his coaching career as a full-time assistant under Calhoun at his alma mater in 1984 helping the program to two more NCAA berths and a combined 48-14 record. The pair then moved to the University of Connecticut where the team grew from a 9-19 mark in year one (1986-87) to make seven consecutive postseason trips, four NCAA Tournaments, two NCAA Sweet 16’s and an NCAA Elite Eight.

That run propelled Leitao to his first head coaching job at Northeastern (1994-96) where he won 18 games as a first year head coach. He then returned to UConn as Associate Head Coach and made six more postseason trips highlighted by the 1999 NCAA Championship.

At UConn Leitao assisted in the recruitment of several future NBA performers including the likes of Ray Allen, Richard Hamilton, Emeka Okafor, Donyell Marshall, Clifford Robinson, Jake Voskuhl, Travis Knight, Scott Burrell, Caron Butler, Khalid El-Amin, Tate George, Donny Marshall and Kevin Ollie.

“I’ve known Dave so long, he is practically a member of my family,” Connecticut Head Coach Jim Calhoun said. “As a player, he was a great leader and he came with me from Day One at UConn to help build a program, so he obviously shares in an awful lot of the success we’ve been fortunate enough to achieve.

“He went on to become a tremendous head coach, winning an ACC championship and being named ACC Coach of the Year,” Calhoun continued. “But besides being an outstanding coach, he’s an outstanding person — one of the best people I’ve ever been involved with as a player, a coach, and a close friend. What Dave adds to the Missouri staff is a coach who has seen everything from building a program, to recruiting at the highest level, to winning national championships, to developing young men into players who can succeed at the next level. He has first-hand experience in every phase of college basketball and there is no doubt in my mind that he will be a tremendous asset to Coach Haith’s staff. I wish him nothing but great success at Missouri.”

Connecticut made two more NCAA Elite Eight trips (1998 and 2002) during his second stint in Storrs, Conn., and following a 2001-02 campaign in which the Huskies went 27-6, a more seasoned Leitao returned to the sidelines as a head coach at DePaul. The Blue Demons won 58 games over three years in Chicago and advanced to three consecutive postseasons. His 2004 squad shared the Conference USA title and qualified for the NCAA Tournament, while his 2005 Blue Demons earned a postseason NIT victory over Missouri at Mizzou Arena in 2005. In Leitao’s first season the Blue Demons were one of college basketball’s most improved clubs going from a 9-19 mark (2-12 in C-USA) the year before his arrival to 16-13 (8-8 C-USA). In fact Leitao’s league crown and NCAA berth at DePaul remain the most recent in that program’s history.

Leitao then took over at Virginia in 2005-06 and led the program to three postseason trips, including the league title in 2007. That 2007 Cavaliers squad was pegged eighth in the ACC preseason poll, but shared the conference title with North Carolina and recorded the most league wins (11) since 1994-95. That team also topped Albany in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, marking Virginia’s first NCAA appearance since 2001 and first NCAA win since 1995.

Leitao has used an attention to detail and defensive mindset as a catalyst for success at each stop. Virginia led the ACC (in league games) in field goal percentage defense (.408) in 2007 and consistently ranked among the league’s better rebounding clubs.

“We are really excited to have another experienced coach such as Dave in our program and feel like he will really help the overall development of our team,” Haith said. “He gives us another veteran presence on the bench and his experience as a head coach, coupled with his experience competing and winning championships, will help mold our young men for the future.”

— MU Sports Information —

Cunningham, LeFevre lead Mustangs past Omaha

The St. Joseph Mustangs won their second consecutive game Thursday night at Phil Welch Stadium as St. Joe’s summer college baseball team shut out Omaha, 6-0.

Cody Cunningham moved to 3-0 this season as he threw a complete-game shutout and allowed just two hits.  Cunningham struck out eight and walked just one batter.

The game was scoreless until the third inning when St. Joe shortstop Maxime LeFevre hit a grand slam to put the Mustangs ahead 4-0.

Shane Segovia drove in the other two runs with a single in the sixth inning as St. Joseph improves to 8-5 and 6-5 in the MINK League.

The Mustangs are on the road Friday night as they travel to Sedalia for 7:00 p.m. first pitch.

Western grad Garnett shoots 8-over 78 in opening round at U.S. Open

Missouri Western graduate Brice Garnett made his PGA Tour debut Thursday in the opening round of the U.S. Open at the Olympic Club in San Francisco.

The Gallatin native struggled in his first round as he shot an 8-over par 78.

Garnett bogied five of his first eight holes and finished the front at 5-over par.  He played much better on the back nine as he finished 3-over, but he double-bogied the par five 16th hole.

Garnett is tied for 125th and he’ll tee of at 11:01 a.m. Friday for his second round.

American Michael Thompson leads the U.s. Open after an opening round 4-under 66.  He has a three shot lead on five golfer who are tied at 1-under par, including Tiger Woods.

Royals rally in ninth to defeat Milwaukee

Royals manager Ned Yost and outfielder Jeff Francoeur both had been ejected long before the ninth inning of Thursday night’s game against Milwaukee, so they had to settle for watching its dramatic conclusion on television.

They both saw Brayan Pena deliver an RBI single to tie the game.

Neither of them saw Jarrod Dyson cross home plate with the winning run.

“I don’t know what happened! They didn’t do a real good job of showing it on TV,” Yost said with a broad smile in the moments afterward. “Frenchy and I were watching it on TV and started pushing each other, and all of a sudden, Dyson is sliding across home plate.”

Pena had rounded first base when Brewers shortstop Edwin Maysonet cut off the throw from left field, and he made the mistake of firing to second base. That allowed the speedy Dyson to take off for home, his slide giving the Royals a 4-3 victory and three-game sweep.

“Ned had to pull me back because I was going to run out there and celebrate,” Francoeur said. “He had to remind me that you can’t go back down there after you’ve been thrown out.”

The wild ninth inning began when Mitch Maier reached first base while striking out on a wild pitch against Brewers closer John Axford (1-3), who also blew a save chance the previous night.

Milwaukee had pulled ahead in the eighth when Carlos Gomez singled off Luke Hochevar, and Maysonet laid down a sacrifice to get him into scoring position. Pinch-hitter Cody Ransom singled to left off reliever Jose Mijares to give Milwaukee the lead.

The run put Shaun Marcum in line to pick up his fourth straight win — at least, until everything unraveled for the second straight night for Axford.

He allowed Escobar’s two-run triple in the ninth inning on Wednesday night, and the Royals went on to win the game when Mike Moustakas drew a bases-loaded walk in the 11th inning.

“Even when I felt good today and was hitting my spots, except for one bad pitch, it still didn’t work out in my favor,” Axford said. “I felt great. Everything was coming out straight, everything was coming out fine.”

For a while, everything was going just fine.

Axford struck out Maier to lead off the ninth, but the pitch in the dirt skipped away and Maier went to first base. Axford rallied to retire Moustakas and Alcides Escobar.

That brought up the light-hitting Dyson, who managed to draw a walk. Pena came in to pinch hit for Humberto Quintero and singled to left, the start of a bizarre ending to a ballgame.

“I was trying to make good contact, put the ball in play,” Pena said. “I knew we had some speed on the base paths. I just tried to make something happen.”

Tim Collins (4-0) worked the ninth inning to pick up the win for the Royals, who wrapped up a three-game sweep to build some momentum for their upcoming road trip.

Ryan Braun and Aramis Ramirez each homered for Milwaukee, which got 7 2/3 innings from Shaun Marcum in one of his best performances of the year. The only real mistake he made was the two-run homer he served up to Eric Hosmer in the seventh inning.

“We played a good game until that last inning,” Brewers manager Ron Roenicke said. “Same thing. We let it get away again.”

Francoeur and Yost had both ended up in the clubhouse by the fourth inning.

The outfielder was ejected in the second inning by plate umpire Dan Iassogna for arguing a called third strike, and Yost was tossed when he started arguing with Iassogna over a bunt attempt by the Brewers’ Nyjer Morgan a couple of innings later.

It was a particularly embarrassing ejection for Francoeur, who is the namesake of a promotion for Thursday night home games. Fans can purchase tickets for $21 — his jersey number — and receive a T-shirt, drink coupon and seat in the “Frenchy Quarter” section overlooking right field.

Several hundred fans wearing the yellow shirts booed as Francoeur was ejected.

“I might have to invite them all out for a `Frenchy Quarter’ Wednesday,” he said.

— Associated Press —

Freese’s big night lifts St. Louis past Chicago

David Freese homered, doubled and drove in three runs, leading the St. Louis Cardinals to a 5-3 victory over the Chicago White Sox on Thursday night.

Adam Dunn tied Texas’ Josh Hamilton for the major league home run lead with his 22nd, a three-run shot in the sixth that pulled the White Sox to 5-3.

Matt Adams had a two-run single for St. Louis, which had scored one run in three straight games coming in and no more than two in each of the last five.

Cardinals starter Jake Westbrook (5-6) retired the first 12 batters on 41 pitches before giving up a leadoff single in the fifth inning to Paul Konerko, who leads the American League with a .364 average. Westbrook threw only 67 pitches in six innings, allowing five hits and three runs.

The win snapped a slump for Westbrook, who had gone 0-4 with a 7.55 ERA in his previous six outings since winning May 8 at Arizona.

Westbrook also broke his skid against Chicago. He was 0-5 with a 5.87 ERA in his previous eight starts against the White Sox since beating them Aug. 7, 2007, when he was with Cleveland. He had not faced Chicago since 2010.

Jason Motte pitched the ninth for his 13th save.

White Sox starter Gavin Floyd (4-7) is 1-4 with a 10.38 ERA in his last six starts. Floyd, who is 0-5 in his last eight interleague starts, allowed five runs in 4 2/3 innings, hiking his ERA to 5.63.

Freese gave the Cardinals a 1-0 lead with a double in the second inning. He made it 3-0 with a two-out, two-run homer to center field in the third.

After striking out twice, Adams drove in two runs when he singled on a full-count pitch with the bases loaded. That gave St. Louis a 5-0 lead in the fifth inning.

In the sixth, with two on and two outs, Dunn slammed the first pitch from Westbrook over the center field fence. Dunn, who has 50 RBIs, was back in the starting lineup after being scratched Wednesday because of a mild ankle sprain. Dunn has four home runs and 11 RBIs in his last six games.

St. Louis shortstop Rafael Furcal snapped an 0-for-23 skid with a single in the eighth.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City signs second-round draft pick Sam Selman

The Kansas City Royals announced Thursday the club has signed second-round draft choice Sam Selman, the 66th overall selection in the 2012 First-Year Player Draft.

The 21-year-old Selman is a 6-foot-3, 185-pound left-hander from Vanderbilt University.  Selman was 9-3 for the Commodores in 2012, his junior season, with a 3.55 ERA in 17 games, including 13 starts.  The native of Austin, Texas, where he graduated from St. Andrews High School, helped lead Vanderbilt to the NCAA Regionals where they lost to North Carolina State.

The Royals have now signed 28 of the club’s 40 selections from last week’s First-Year Player Draft, including all of the top 11 picks.

— Royals Media Relations —

MWSU’s Bass & Allan earn preseason All-America honors

Missouri Western’s record setting defensive end, David Bass and outstanding offensive tackle, Macon Allan have earned their first preseason All-American honors of 2012. The St. Louis, Mo. and King City, Mo. natives were first team selections by Lindy’s Sports.

Bass was named to numerous All-America teams in 2011 which included first team honors from D2Football.com, Don Hansen Football Gazette, AP “Little” All-American and Beyond Sports College Network. His 20 tackles for a loss set a school record for most in a season while his 14.5 sacks led the MIAA and left him one-half sack short of the single season school record. He has 28.5 sacks in his career which is 1.5 short of the school record. He tied a single game high with four sacks in a game twice and was fourth in the nation in sacks per game at 1.21. He earned MIAA Defensive Player of the Week honors twice and was the D2Football.com Player of the Week once.

He finished the season with 55 tackles with 35 being solo. He had eight quarterback hurries, four pass break-ups and one forced fumble. He was named first team all-MIAA for the first time in his career last season.

Allan has been a rock on the offensive line since he got to Western. He has started all 36 games in his three years of playing. Last season he was first team All-MIAA for the first time in his career. He was also named to the Don Hansen Honorable Metion all-America team as well as the Don Hansen second team all-Region. He helped the Griffons rush for 240 yards per game and almost six yards per carry in 2011.

Bass and Allan are two of 12 players from the MIAA to be named either first or second-team All-American by Lindy’s, double the selections of any other conference in the country.

The Griffons finished 9-3 last season, which tied them for the most wins in a season. The Griffons are set to return a total of 17 starters on offense and defense next season, including 10 of 11 on offense and seven of 11 on defense.

Missouri Western will open the season on Thursday, August 30 against the University of Central Missouri in Spratt Stadium. Game time is set for 6:00 p.m. and you can listen on 680 KFEQ.

Lindy’s First Team Preseason All-America
Offense
QB – Mitchell Gale, Abilene Christian
RB – Joe Glendening, Hillsdale
RB – Daronte McNeill, Elizabeth City State
WR – Chris Bowden, Wingate
WR – Charles Johnson, Grand Valley State
TE – Joe Don Duncan, Dixie State
OL – Macon Allan, Missouri Western State
OL – Garth Heikkinen, Minnesota-Duluth
OL – Tim Lelito, Grand Valley State
OL – Ken Van Huele, Midwestern State
AP – John Brown, Pittsburg State
PK – Derek Kroon, Truman State

Defense
DL – David Bass, Missouri Western State
DL – Jonas Celian, West Virginia Wesleyan
DL – Tim Green, Lincoln (PA)
DL – Tom Herd, New Haven
LB – Jordan Campbell, New Mexico Highlands
LB – Nate Dreiling, Pittsburg State
LB – Cody Fleming, Shippensburg
DB – Aaron Cornett, Wayne State (MI)
DB – Alex Dinolfi, Kutztown
DB – Rontez Miles, California (PA)
DB – Richie Schumacher, Truman State
P – Taylor Accardi, Colorado School of Mines

Lindy’s Second Team Preseason All-America
Offense
QB – Brandon Kelsey, Midwestern State
RB – James Franklin, Northwest Missouri State
RB – Keldrick Jackson, Midwestern State
WR – DeJuan Beard, Washburn
WR – Dsaiah Voegeli, Merrimack
TE – David Pawelek, Colorado School of Mines
OL – Logan Freeman, Central Missouri
OL – Mike Nelson, Central Washington
OL – Brett Frydendahl, Humboldt State
OL – Ryan Schraeder, Valdosta State
OL – Lamar Young, Delta State
AP – Jonathan Woodson, Texas A&M-Kingsville
PK – Rockne Belmonte, Northern Michigan

Defense
DL – Brad Davis, Elizabeth City State
DL – Vauchard Goodridge, Clark Atlanta
DL – Howard Jones, Shepherd
DL – Brandon Williams, Missouri Southern State
LB – Cody Bloom, Ashland
LB – Jesse Robertson, West Virginia Wesleyan
LB – Marquis Wadley, Tarleton State
DB – Derek Lohmann, Emporia State
DB – Sam Kuck, Nebraska-Kearney
DB – Marvin Matthews, St. Cloud State
DB – Bryce Pella, Western Oregon
P – Randy Weich, Wayne State (NE)

— MWSU Sports Information —

Mustangs cruise to 16-4 win over Kansas City Monarchs

After two days off, the St. Joseph Mustangs had no trouble in a non-league game Wednesday night at Phil Welch Stadium.  St. Joe’s summer college baseball team rolled past the Kansas City Monarchs, 16-4.

The Mustangs improve to 7-5 this season.

St. Joseph scored in the first inning on an RBI ground out by Spiker Helms and then made it a blowout as they scored five runs in the each of the fourth, fifth and seventh innings.

Kris Koerper led the Mustangs as he went 3-for-4 with a home run, two runs scored and three RBI.  Shane Segovia also drove in three runs as he was 2-for-4 with a double and a triple.

Tim Caputo and Jordan Hurtt also had two hits each in the victory.

Stanten Jones picked up the win for St. Joe as he went five innings and allowed five hits and one run.

The Mustangs are back in action Thursday as they host Omaha at 7:00 p.m. inside Phil Welch Stadium.

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