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Paulino, Royals blank Oakland in series opener

Ned Yost and everyone else in the Royals dugout was yelling at Felipe Paulino when Jemile Weeks took off for second base with two outs in the third inning Friday night.

Paulino never heard them. How could he out on the mound with the crowd roaring?

Yet he whirled around anyway and threw Weeks out with a pinpoint throw, getting out of a jam and keeping the Oakland Athletics off the scoreboard. He managed to get through six innings before turning it over to the Kansas City bullpen, which held on for the 2-0 victory.

As for the pickoff throw in the third, well, everything’s been going Paulino’s way lately.

“The biggest out was the caught stealing,” Yost said. “Paulino made a fantastic throw. We were all yelling, ‘Step off! Step off! Step off!’ But you can’t hear anything out there.”

Paulino stepped off anyway and made the key out of the game, and then came back the next inning and picked off Yoenis Cespedes when he drifted too far off first base.

The two outs in tight situations helped Paulino (3-1) hold the opposition off the scoreboard entirely through six innings for the fourth time in six starts, making him the unquestionable ace of one of the most haphazard starting rotations in baseball.

“Everything is going good for me,” Paulino said. “I got in a couple of situations in the third and fourth, but I tried to put up zeros and I did that.”

Yuniesky Betancourt came off the disabled list to provide an RBI double in the first, and Mike Moustakas added an RBI blooper to left later in the inning, helping Kansas City win for only the sixth time in 23 games at Kauffman Stadium this season.

Both of the Royals’ runs were charged to Bartolo Colon (4-6), who recovered from a sloppy start to last seven innings — an encouraging outing after going 1-3 with a 7.92 ERA in May.

Jonathan Broxton worked a perfect ninth for his 12th save.

“I was able to throw some strikes,” said Broxton, who was facing the A’s for the first time since back-to-back hit batters gave Oakland a victory on the Royals’ opening road trip. “I started elevating, and once I started elevating, they started swinging right through it.”

The A’s have been shut out six times in their last 16 games, and have been outscored 39-12 during their current losing streak. They came into the night ranked last in the majors in batting average (.210) and slugging percentage (.338), and second-to-last in on-base percentage and runs.

“It’s pretty much the same story offensively. We’re having some struggles,” Oakland manager Bob Melvin said. “No matter what you’re doing, you’re always trying to find things to do to better yourself. We’re just having trouble doing it.”

The Royals nearly added to their first-inning cushion, but Alcides Escobar grounded out to leave two runners aboard. Kansas City also left a runner in scoring position in the second inning before failing twice to plate a run with the bases loaded in the third.

Colon was brilliant over the next four innings, allowing only a two-out single by Escobar in the sixth and a leadoff single by Humberto Quintero in the seventh.

“A veteran like him doesn’t let a couple of runs early on fluster him,” Melvin said. “He just puts that aside and goes out and pitches the game.”

The problem for Oakland was that Paulino was just as good.

The right-hander wasn’t particularly efficient, burning through 94 pitches in six innings, yet he managed to keep a struggling Oakland lineup off balance all night.

Weeks led off the game with a double that just skipped past Royals first baseman Eric Hosmer, but Paulino came back to retire the next eight in order.

He also set the A’s down in order in the fifth and sixth before turning it over to the bullpen, which has been stellar most of the season. Kelvin Herrera worked a perfect seventh and Greg Holland worked around a one-out walk before handing the game to Broxton in the ninth.

“Our pitching was phenomenal tonight,” Yost said. “Felipe Paulino threw the ball very well, and the bullpen did what it’s been doing all year.”

— Associated Press —

Cardinals get no-hit by New York’s Johan Santana

For more than 50 years, the New York Mets chased that elusive no-hitter. Johan Santana finally finished the job.

Santana pitched the first no-hitter in team history, helped by an umpire’s missed call and an outstanding catch in left field in an 8-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Friday night.

After a string of close calls over the past five decades, Santana went all the way in the Mets’ 8,020th game.

“Finally, the first one,” he said. “That is the greatest feeling ever.”

He needed a couple of key assists to pull it off.

Carlos Beltran, back at Citi Field for the first time since the Mets traded him last July, hit a line drive over third base in the sixth inning that hit the foul line and should have been called fair. But third-base umpire Adrian Johnson ruled it foul and the no-hitter was intact — even though a replay clearly showed a mark where the ball landed on the chalk line.

“I saw the ball hitting outside the line, just foul,” Johnson told a pool reporter.

The umpire acknowledged that he saw the replay afterward but declined to comment.

“It was in front of his face, and he called it foul. I thought it was a fair ball,” Beltran said. “At the end of the day, one hit wasn’t going to make a difference in the ballgame. We needed to score more runs and we didn’t do that.”

Hometown kid Mike Baxter then made a tremendous catch in left field to rob Yadier Molina of extra bases in the seventh. Baxter crashed into the wall, injured his shoulder and left the game.

Making his 11th start since missing last season after shoulder surgery, Santana (3-2) threw a career-high 134 pitches in his second consecutive shutout. Relying on a sneaky fastball and the baffling changeup that’s always been his signature, he struck out eight and walked five.

“Amazing,” Santana said after tossing the majors’ third no-hitter this year. “Coming into this season I was just hoping to come back and stay healthy and help this team, and now I am in this situation in the greatest city for baseball.”

Before the game, Mets manager Terry Collins said he planned to limit Santana to 110-115 pitches all season.

“I just couldn’t take him out,” a choked-up Collins said afterward.

Born in 1962, the Mets have been built on pitching when they’ve fielded their best teams. But neither Nolan Ryan, Tom Seaver nor Dwight Gooden could throw a no-hitter for the Mets — though all three are among the seven pitchers who tossed one after leaving the team.

Philip Humber is another one. He pitched a perfect game for the Chicago White Sox at Seattle on April 21, and Jered Weaver of the Los Angeles Angels no-hit Minnesota on May 2.

After the game, Santana addressed his teammates in the clubhouse. He thanked them and said: “Yeah, baby! Believe it!”

Santana got a warm ovation as he headed out to the mound for the ninth inning, and the two-time Cy Young Award winner quickly retired Matt Holliday and Allen Craig on shallow fly balls.

With the crowd of 27,069 on its feet in a frenzy, World Series MVP David Freese went to a 3-2 count before his foul tip was caught by Josh Thole, just activated from the disabled list earlier in the day.

Santana pumped his left fist and slammed it into his glove as Thole showed the ball to plate umpire Gary Cederstrom and then went running out toward the mound.

“I don’t think anybody expected that tonight. Everything came out perfect for him,” Beltran said. “It should mean a lot for him after battling last year with the injuries. … I’m not happy about it, but at the same time he’s a good man and I’m happy for him.”

The Mets rushed out of the dugout and mobbed Santana in a raucous dogpile as security tackled a fan who ran onto the field near home plate. Moments later, the pitcher raised his right arm and saluted the crowd, which was chanted his name from the eighth inning on. The big scoreboard in center flashed Santana’s picture and read “No-Han.”

“It was a crazy night — my fastball moving all over the place,” Santana said. “I don’t think I’ve ever thrown a no-hitter in video games.”

The Cardinals should have had a hit in the sixth.

Beltran, traded by the Mets to San Francisco last July after 6½ rocky seasons in New York, led off with a low liner over third. Television replays showed the ball nicked the foul line just behind the bag on the dirt, taking a small chunk of chalk with it. But Johnson called it foul immediately and Beltran eventually grounded out.

“It was tough because it happened so quick. I wasn’t able to see anything,” Santana said.

“The umpire made his call and that was the end of it,” he said.

But with the next batter at the plate, Cardinals third base coach Jose Oquendo twice got in Johnson’s face for heated arguments — the two even appeared to bump each other. Rookie manager Mike Matheny also came out to protest, but nobody was ejected.

Almost exactly two years ago — on June 2, 2010 — Armando Galarraga lost a perfect game when first base umpire Jim Joyce admittedly blew a call that should’ve resulted in the final out. The miss in Detroit instead gave Cleveland’s Jason Donald a single with two outs in the ninth.

Major League Baseball had considered expanding replay for this season to review fair-or-foul calls and trapped balls. The change required the approval of MLB and the unions representing the umpires and the players — when there was no agreement, extra replay was postponed until at least 2013.

Santana cruised from there into the seventh, when Molina hit a one-out drive to deep left. Baxter, who grew up rooting for the Mets only 10 minutes from where Citi Field stands, raced back and made a terrific catch before crashing full force into the fence.

Baxter stayed down on the warning track as Mets trainers, players and coaches rushed out to him. Santana crouched in the infield with a couple of teammates and then made a few warmup tosses to stay loose.

Baxter walked off the field under his own power, with trainer Ray Ramirez holding the outfielder’s left arm. The Mets said Baxter has a bruised left shoulder and was having more tests.

“When I saw him running back onto the warning track and he made that play, it was amazing. An outstanding play and he saved the game,” said Santana, traded to the Mets by Minnesota before the 2008 season. “All these guys, I want to thank them for what we accomplished.”

Lucas Duda hit a three-run homer off Adam Wainwright (4-6) and drove in four runs, tying a career high. Daniel Murphy added three RBIs.

The San Diego Padres, who started play in 1969, are now the only team without a no-hitter.

The Mets’ seemingly endless pursuit had become something of a famous quest, with at least one website even dedicated to counting off their total number of games without one each day during the season.

The list of pitchers who have thrown no-hitters after leaving the Mets includes Ryan and Seaver, both Hall of Famers, plus Gooden, David Cone, Mike Scott, Hideo Nomo and Humber.

Seaver came within two outs of a perfect game in 1969 and fell one out shy of a no-hitter in 1975, the previous time a Mets pitcher had made it into the ninth without yielding a hit.

— Associated Press —

Royals win second straight series with victory over Indians

The Kansas City Royals are headed home on a high note.

Wednesday’s 6-3 win over the Cleveland Indians was significant on several fronts for the Royals. The victory gave Kansas City a 5-4 road trip in which it won four of its last six games. The Royals, who are off Thursday, finished May with a 15-13 record, their first winning mark in the month since 2000.

Kansas City, which took two of three in both Baltimore and Cleveland after losing two of three in New York to open the trip, is 16-11 on the road. The Royals are 18-14 since losing 12 straight from April 11-24.

“It’s time to forget about the streak,” Kansas City manager Ned Yost said. “We’ve played really good baseball from that point on and we’re going to continue to get better.”

“We played three good teams,” said left fielder Alex Gordon, who had two hits and drove in a run. “Baltimore and Cleveland are at the top of their divisions. We’re starting to play a little better. This road trip is definitely a positive.”

Bruce Chen overcame a rocky second inning and the Royals scored their first five runs with two outs. Chen (4-5) held Cleveland scoreless after giving up three runs in the second. Gordon, Johnny Giavotella, Mike Moustakas, Jeff Francoeur and Brayan Pena each had run-scoring hits to help Kansas City rally from a 3-0 deficit.

Chen worked the first five innings before relievers Tim Collins, Aaron Crow, Jose Mijares and Jonathan Broxton pitched scoreless ball over the final four innings. Broxton worked a shaky ninth for his 11th save.

Broxton retired the first batter, but Shin-Soo Choo walked and Jason Kipnis singled. Asdrubal Cabrera walked to load the bases, but Jose Lopez hit into a game-ending double play.

Cleveland, which has lost five of six, fell to 4-11 against left-handed starters.

The Indians announced before the game that designated hitter Travis Hafner will have arthroscopic surgery on his right knee on Thursday and is expected to miss four to six weeks. Catchers Carlos Santana and Lou Marson and third baseman Jack Hannahan are also out with injuries.

Cleveland has an off-day Thursday, which is about the only good news manager Manny Acta has had in the last week.

“This was not a good series,” he said. “The week continues to be rough for us. Pitching sets the tone, and we aren’t setting the right one. The day off comes at a perfect time. We all need to go home and relax, and come back and play better baseball on Friday.”

Chen, who improved to 6-3 against Cleveland, chuckled when asked if he had to grind out the victory.

“It was a battle,” he said. “The bullpen did a great job. Once we got the lead, I couldn’t let my teammates down. It was a total team win.”

Jeanmar Gomez (3-4) gave up five runs in five innings. The Indians, who swept a three-game series from Detroit last week, lost all three games in Chicago over the weekend and dropped two of three against the Royals. Cleveland, which is off Thursday, fell out of first place in the AL Central for the first time since April 24 with Tuesday’s loss.

Kansas City scored twice in the third on an RBI double by Moustakas and a run-scoring single by Francoeur. Gordon’s run-scoring double and an RBI single by Giavotella put the Royals ahead in the fourth. Pena, who had three hits, added an RBI single in the fifth. The rallies in the fourth and fifth began with two outs and nobody on.

“That just shows you our offense right now,” said Yost. “They keep getting after it even with nobody on and two outs. That’s a good sign.”

The Indians scored three times in the second on run-scoring singles by Casey Kotchman and Choo and an RBI fielder’s choice by Luke Carlin.

Moustakas hit an RBI double in the third before Francoeur’s single to left made it 3-2.

The Royals scored two more with two outs in the fourth, when Gordon doubled off the wall in left and Giavotella hit a single through the right side .

Billy Butler, the only starter without a hit, added an RBI groundout in the eighth.

The Royals, who lost their first 10 home games of the season, return to Kauffman Stadium for a series against Oakland on Friday. Kansas City is major-league worst 5-17 at home.

“We’ve got to figure that out,” Gordon said. “We’ve been playing better on the road. It’s just one of those things that will come over time. We’re due for a good stretch at home.”

Gomez gave up 10 hits.

Left-hander Scott Barnes, called up from Triple-A Columbus before the game, made his major league debut in the sixth. He walked two and hit a batter, but didn’t allow a run.

Johnny Damon singled in the sixth for his 2,736th career hit, which moves him past Goose Goslin and into 54th place on the career list.

Cabrera played shortstop Wednesday and was 1 for 4 with a walk. He was the DH on Tuesday after missing four games with a strained hamstring.

— Associated Press —

Mustangs announce 2012 St. Joseph Baseball Hall of Fame Class

Two individuals and an entire team will be inducted into St. Joseph’s Baseball Hall of Fame this year.

Longtime Missouri Western baseball coach, Doug Minnis, and Linden Black, a catalyst in bringing summer baseball back to St. Joseph, will be joined by the 1975 Missouri Western team.  That Minnis-coached team won the NAIA district championships and competed in the NAIA World Series at Phil Welch Stadium.

The induction ceremony will be Saturday, June 16, when the Mustangs host the Missouri Western Alumni Baseball Team.

Minnis, who launched Missouri Western’s baseball program in 1969, won 684 games during his 30-year career there.  He retired after the 1999 season, and remains involved as a volunteer at Western and in the community.

Prior to coming to Missouri Western, Minnis coached at Waverly High School (Waverly, Kan.) and at Bishop Ward High School (Kansas City, Kan.).  He is a member of seven  halls of fame:  Stafford High School (Stafford, Kan.) and Emporia State University (Emporia, Kan.) from which he graduated; Bishop Ward; Missouri Western; National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics;  American Baseball Coaches Association, and the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame.  Minnis and his wife, Marjorie, reside in St. Joseph.

Black, whose days at what is now Welch Stadium go back to shining shoes for the St. Joseph Cardinals, selling soft drinks, and pulling weeds, was the catalyst in organizing the MINK League in the fall of 1995.  He served as president of the St. Joseph Saints for three years, board chairman for seven years as the city earned recognition as the premier organization in the league.

Elected commissioner/treasurer of the MINK League, Black ruled on disputes and infractions, visited cities wanting to gain entry to the league and advised them about the “Saints model” of achieving success and working with city officials. He served in those capacities for 11 years. Black and his wife, Beverly, now reside in Tyler, Texas.

The 1975 team defeated Missouri Southern and Evangel to win the district play-off, then beat Buena Vista (Storm Lake, Iowa) and Winona State (Winona, Minn.) to advance to the NAIA World Series.  The squad played the University of Missouri and the University of Kansas twice each, splitting with each of the schools.

Members of the 1975 team were pitchers Paul Kolomic, Kent Clark, Gary Snider, Nick Finn, Mike Clark, Ron Jones and Stan Diskin; catchers Blake DeMaria and Steve VanHorn; infielders Todd Walters, Bill Mangini, Blake Schreck, David Sego and Bob Vecchione; outfielders Mark Clark, David Cain, David Limbaugh and Tim Skorija.

This is the second class for the St. Joseph Baseball Hall of Fame.  Last year’s inductees were Dave Brown, manager of the Boys Baseball team that won the world championship in 1972; Julius Hochman, who launched and ran the Boys Baseball program here for many years, and Jim Hamlin, one of the original organizers of the college-age summer program in St. Joseph.  Mr. Hochman and Mr. Hamlin were honored posthumously.

The Hall of Fame here was organized by Dan Gerson, president and chief executive officer of the St. Joseph Mustangs, and Rick Muntean, chief operating officer.  The goal is to give recognition to individuals and teams who have made major contributions to baseball at all levels in St. Joseph.

— Mustangs Media Relations —

Royals down Cleveland as Smith earns first win

Will Smith celebrated his first major league win by taking four showers.

Two by teammates dousing him with beer and two more to rinse off the suds.

“I’m very clean,” he said, “and very happy.”

Smith survived a shaky start and pitched six innings for his first win and Mike Moustakas had a career-best four RBIs, leading the Kansas City Royals to an 8-2 win over Cleveland on Tuesday night, bouncing the Indians out of first place in the AL Central for the first time in 28 days.

Moustakas hit a two-run homer off Justin Masterson (2-4) in the first inning and singled in two runs in the second as the Royals built a 7-2 lead for Smith (1-1).

That was more than enough support for the left-hander, who allowed two runs and four hits and rebounded nicely after being thumped by the New York Yankees in his big-league debut last week. Afterward, the humble 22-year-old was stunned by the moment.

“It’s just awesome,” said Smith, who was in the clubhouse for the final three innings. “An amazing feeling. You think of what it will be like your whole life. Just getting to the big leagues, and then to win? It’s a dream come true.”

Humberto Quintero added two RBIs as the Royals, despite three errors and 12 strikeouts, improved to 15-11 on the road.

Masterson, who beat Detroit ace Justin Verlander in his previous start, allowed seven earned runs in six innings.

The Indians have dropped four of five since sweeping the Tigers last week. Following the game, Indians manager Manny Acta opened his remarks by commenting on his team’s flat performance.

“I must confess, that had to be the most boring game I have ever been part of,” he said. “That second inning just sucked all the energy out of us.”

Smith took the mound with a 2-0 lead but quickly found trouble, walking the first two hitters he faced before giving up a single to load the bases. Smith limited the damage to two runs and gained strength as he went along. After he allowed two singles in the third, the only Cleveland player to reach — on a throwing error by third baseman Moustakas — was erased on a double play.

Smith walked two and struck out five.

“I just got mad and went after them,” he said. “It sure helps when your offense puts up some runs. I can’t thank them enough.”

Royals manager Ned Yost said he nearly pulled Smith in the first.

“It was real shaky, so much so that I had (Vin) Mazzaro warming up,” Yost said. “If it gets to four (runs), I’m getting him. I didn’t want to do it. Then he got after it. Getting the lead helped him regain composure and he pretty much said, ‘Enough of this.’ And he went right after people.”

Masterson trailed 7-2 after two innings but, like Smith, the right-hander found his groove and finished with no walks and eight strikeouts, his most since fanning 10 on Opening Day.

“It’s always one inning,” Masterson said.

Most of the pregame discussion centered around Cleveland closer Chris Perez’s gesture toward Royals outfielder Jarrod Dyson in the ninth inning of Monday’s series opener.

Perez, who irked the Royals with comments earlier this season, celebrated a strikeout of Dyson by waving his hand — “You can’t see me” — in front of his face. Dyson was annoyed by Perez’s antics and was looking forward to getting even with the right-hander. That matchup never materialized as the Royals built a large lead and rolled.

Indians shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera went 1 for 4 as the DH after missing three consecutive games with a tight hamstring.

By the end of the second inning, Moustakas already had his four RBIs and was looking for more. After connecting for his eighth homer in the first, his two-run single capped a five-run outburst in the second off Masterson as the Royals opened a five-run lead.

Kansas City used small-ball tactics — a single, hit batter and sacrifice — to set things up before Quintero, Alex Gordon and Johnny Giavotella delivered RBI singles. Moustakas just missed hitting a three-run homer — the umpires left the field to review his shot to right — before his base hit made it 7-2.

Moustakas was batting just .115 (3 of 26) on the road trip before his homer in the first. With Giavotella on with a fielder’s choice, Moustakas drove Masterson’s 3-1 pitch over the wall in right-center to make it 2-0.

Moustakas could have accepted some of the credit for getting Smith his first win, but he passed the praise off to his young teammate.

“It’s a big night for Will,” he said. “That’s what today is all about. It was a lot of fun watching him get his first major league victory.”

The Indians tied it in their half on RBIs by Jose Lopez and Michael Brantley, and Cleveland seemed to have Smith reeling. But the smooth lefty, who lasted just 3 1/3 innings in his debut at Yankee Stadium, retired Aaron Cunningham on a pop out before striking out Lonnie Chisenhall.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals lose to Atlanta as Braves snap 8-game skid

Two big swings and one last 98-mph fastball left the Atlanta Braves with a giant sigh of relief.

Dan Uggla hit a three-run homer and Michael Bourn also went deep Tuesday night, leading the Braves to a 5-4 win over the St. Louis Cardinals, snapping an eight-game losing streak — Atlanta’s longest in more than two years.

“This is not an indication of what’s going to happen the next day or the next week or the next month,” Uggla said. “But it definitely snaps the feeling of, ‘Aww, man, are we ever going to win again?'”

Bourn led off the bottom of the first with his fifth homer of the season, tying a career high. Uggla made it 4-0 in the third, sending one into the seats in left-center. The Cardinals closed within a run in the seventh, but Eric O’Flaherty and Craig Kimbrel each worked one perfect with two strikeouts to preserve the win.

Kimbrel earned his 14th save in 15 chances, ending the game by fanning Matt Holliday on a fastball that clocked 98 mph. The right-hander pumped his fist and slapped hands with his teammates, everyone looking as though a weight had been lifted.

“Everyone knows how bad we’ve been scuffling,” Uggla said. “When you get that first one, it eases the tension, eases the pressure. We know what it feels like to win again. It was obviously a big night for us.”

Randall Delgado (3-5) worked into the sixth, allowing three runs, and the Cardinals got closer in the seventh on Yadier Molina’s third RBI of the night, a run-scoring single. He went 4-for-4, including a solo homer.

Moline liked the previous day better, when he had just one hit but the Cardinals won.

“I feel good,” said Molina, who is hitting .560 (14 for 25) with three homers and 11 RBIs during a six-game hitting streak. “At the same time, I’d trade my 1 for 5 from last night and the win and not take the 4-for-4 and the loss.”

Jake Westbrook (4-4) struggled to keep his sinker down and lasted only five innings.

“That’s a couple of games in a row I’ve put us in a hole,” he said. “I’ve got to do a better job. With the sinker that I have, that should keep the ball in the yard.”

The Braves shook things up before the game, sending reliever Kris Medlen to the minors so he could stretch out his arm and return to the big leagues as a starter. He was replaced on the roster by speedy outfielder Jose Constanza, who started in left and batted ninth — ahead of Delgado — as manager Fredi Gonzalez looked for ways to shake the team out of its worst slump since a nine-game winless stretch in April 2010.

“Why not?” Gonzalez said.

The unusual lineup paid off in the fifth, when Constanza led off with a single, moved to second on Westbrook’s errant throw to first, raced to third on Bourn’s deep flyout and sped home on Westbrook’s wild pitch. That gave the Braves a 5-2 lead, which turned out to be just enough to hold off the Cardinals.

“He brings the team a little energy,” Gonzalez said of Constanza, who also sparked the Braves last season after being called up.

Molina had his third four-hit game of the season. He began the comeback with a run-scoring single in the fourth, when St. Louis scored twice to halve Atlanta’s lead to 4-2. Molina followed in the sixth with his eighth homer, a one-out shot into the left-field seats. Then, in the seventh, he came through again with an RBI single to right off Jonny Venters, making it a one-run game.

But Venters, whose struggles have apparently cost him his role as the eighth-inning setup man to Kimbrel, escaped the jam by striking out Matt Adams with runners at first and third.

“Jonny made some strides,” Gonzalez said. “He got them hitting ground balls. Now we’ve got to work on getting them to hit ground balls at somebody.”

Westbrook gave up only five hits, but the long ball sent him to his fourth straight start without a win. Bourn drove a 2-2 pitch into the seats to start the Atlanta first, tying the career high for homers that he set with Houston in 2008. There’s plenty of time to take down that mark, with four months left in the season.

“I’m not trying to hit home runs,” Bourn said. “They just come when they come.”

Bourn took the more customary leadoff role in the third, working Westbrook for a one-out walk. Martin Prado singled on a hit-and-run and Brian McCann grounded out before Uggla came through with his eighth homer.

— Associated Press —

Mizzou opens NCAA baseball tournament at Tucson

The Mizzou baseball team, on the heels of its first ever Big 12 Tournament title over the weekend, will head to the NCAA Tournament Tucson Regional this weekend. The NCAA Regional appearance for Mizzou is its eighth in the last 10 seasons under head coach Tim Jamieson, who is now in his 18th year at the helm of the program. Action at the Regional will begin Friday and run through Monday (if necessary). The Tigers earned the fourth seed in the four-team regional.

Joining the fourth-seeded Tigers in the Tucson Regional is top-seeded Arizona as the Tigers will play the Wildcats in the first round on Friday night at 10 p.m. (CT) on ESPNU. BIG EAST foe Louisville earned the No. 2 seed while New Mexico State earned the No. 3 seed in the bracket. Mizzou of course met second-seeded Louisville back in 2007 when the Tigers hosted the NCAA Regional round in Columbia.

The NCAA Regional appearance for the Tigers is their eighth in the last 10 seasons and their first since 2009.

— MU Sports Information —

Sloppy Royals lose series opener at Cleveland

Jason Kipnis is leading the way for the Cleveland Indians’ injury-ravaged lineup.

Kipnis had three hits and two RBIs, Jose Lopez drove in three runs and Lonnie Chisenhall homered in his first at-bat after being recalled from the minors as reinforcement to help the Indians beat the Kansas City Royals 8-5 Monday.

“We can’t replace the guys we’ve lost, but we’re scoring some runs,” said Kipnis, who is 12 for 24 with six RBIs over his past six games.

Cleveland was without ailing 3-4-5 hitters Asdrubal Cabrera, Carlos Santana and Travis Hafner, but had 14 hits to snap a three-game losing streak.

“You’ve got to give it to these guys,” manager Manny Acta said. “They find a way. I was glad we cut off that streak. Guys like Kipnis do a pretty good job of putting things behind them. They just say, ‘Let’s go get ’em.'”

Josh Tomlin (2-2) gave up four runs and four hits in five innings. The right-hander had not pitched since May 7 due to right wrist tendinitis.

“I felt fine, like I could have kept going,” Tomlin said, adding that he understood the Indians’ cautious approach with him.

Kipnis had a two-run single in a five-run third against Nate Adcock (0-3) as the first-place Indians maintained a half-game lead in the AL Central over the Chicago White Sox. Cleveland had lost three in a row at Chicago over the weekend, allowing 35 runs.

“That series was kind of a train wreck for us,” Tomlin said. “We wanted to get back here and get a win.”

Chris Perez, at odds with booing fans 10 days ago, got a standing ovation as he worked a perfect ninth for his 17th save. His only blown save came on Opening Day.

“I feel great, confident,” Perez said. “I felt that way in spring training, too. That’s why Opening Day was a head-scratcher.”

Kansas City got a two-run homer from Eric Hosmer and a solo drive by Brayan Pena but lost for the eighth time in 12 games.

With the bases loaded and one out in the third, Kipnis sent a hard grounder through the middle for two runs and a 3-2 Indians lead. Lopez followed with a chopper off the plate for an RBI single. Third baseman Mike Moustakas had no play on Lopez, but caught Kipnis advancing too far around second. Second base umpire Dan Bellino ruled that Kipnis ducked under Moustakas’ tag and made it to third.

“He said he never saw him tag him,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “Everybody else in the stadium saw it. I don’t know how he managed to miss it.”

Moustakas was certain he tagged Kipnis.

“(Bellino) might have been in a bad spot,” Moustakas said. “He couldn’t see anything. That was something we needed right there. He ends up scoring. We can’t have that.”

Kipnis’ escape act surprised Acta.

“I tell guys to make them throw the ball,” he said. “Chances of getting out of a rundown are small, but Kipnis is so athletic.”

Casey Kotchman’s RBI single made it 5-2 and finished Adcock.

Chisenhall, recalled from Triple-A Columbus when third baseman Jack Hannahan went on the disabled list before the game with a strained left calf, homered to open the third. Chisenhall went 2 for 4 as the designated hitter in place of Hafner, who missed his fifth game in a row with an inflamed right knee.

“Just to be back here is great and to have a pretty good day adds to it,” said Chisenhall, who hit .267 in 66 games as a rookie last year.

Hosmer’s sixth homer put the Royals ahead 2-0 in the second. It was his first homer in 104 at-bats, since connecting April 25 off Cleveland’s Ubaldo Jimenez. Twenty of Hosmer’s 25 career homers have been in road games.

Pena’s first homer, to start the fifth, closed Kansas City to 5-3. Jarrod Dyson followed with a triple into the right-field corner and scored when Kipnis’ relay throw from second bounced into the stands for an error.

Lopez’s RBI single off the left-field wall made it 6-4 in the bottom half before Dyson’s speed helped the Royals again in the seventh. He walked, stole second and scored on Alcides Escobar’s single to make it 6-5.

Michael Brantley and Lopez had RBIs in the bottom half to make it 8-5.

Adcock gave up four earned runs and six hits over 2 1/3 innings. After the game, he was sent back to Triple-A Omaha for the third time since April 28. Right-hander Vin Mazzaro was called up and will work in long relief.

— Associated Press —

Missouri State earns at-large birth to NCAA Tournament

For the eighth time in program history, the Missouri State Bears have been selected to play in the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship. The Bears earned the No. 3 seed in the Coral Gables (Fla.) Regional as part of the 64-team NCAA field that was announced Monday morning.

Making their first NCAA Tournament appearance in nine years, the Bears (39-20) will face UCF (43-15)–which finished second in the Conference USA regular-season race–in opening-round action Friday (June 1). Top seed and Miami (Fla.) and No. 4 seed Stony Brook make up the other half of the regional. The host Hurricanes (36-21) fell in the ACC Tournament title game and will be making their 40th consecutive NCAA Regional appearance, while the Seawolves (46-11) claimed the America East championship after going 21-3 in conference play.

In their last Championship appearance in 2003, the Bears went 3-1 against Coastal Carolina and host Nebraska to claim the Lincoln (Neb.) Regional, then swept Ohio State in the Super Regional round to advance to the school’s first Division I College World Series appearance. Missouri State is 13-15 all-time in NCAA Division I Tournament play and has won at least two games in each of their last five trips to a regional.

Missouri State was one of three Missouri Valley Conference teams selected for the NCAA Tournament, marking the first time since the 2007 season the league has earned multiple bids and the first time in 12 years the MVC has place three teams in the Championship. MVC Tournament champ Creighton (26-28) drew the No. 4 seed in the Los Angeles Regional and will face No. 2 national seed UCLA as its opening-round opponent. Additionally, league regular-season champion Indiana State (41-17) secured the third seed in the Eugene (Ore.) Regional and a date with No. 2 seed Cal State Fullerton in the first round.

Regional play continues through Sunday (June 4) with a double-elimination format. The 16 regional winners will advance to the Super Regional round, which will be contested June 8-11, with the eight winners of the three-game, head-to-head series moving on to the 2012 NCAA Division I Men’s College World Series at TD Ameritrade Park Omaha in Omaha, Neb., June 15-26.

Tickets for the Coral Gables Regional are available through Ticketmaster or by calling 305-284-2263. Ticket packages for the entire Coral Gables Regional are $90 for field box, $60 for chairback, $45 for adult general admission and $30 for youth, seniors and students. Those packages will go on sale at 9 a.m. (Eastern) on Tuesday. Individual day passes will go on sale later this week. The UM ticket office will be open Tuesday through Friday from 9 – 5 p.m. (Eastern). Additional details pertaining to MSU’s NCAA Regional appearance, including game times, will be released as it becomes available.

— MSU Sports Information —

Lynn wins No. 8 as Cardinals roll past Atlanta

Mike Matheny saw a different edge in Lance Lynn as he approached his second start this year against the Atlanta Braves, the only team to beat him this season.

“He had fire in his eyes today,” Matheny said.

Lynn joined Philadelphia’s Cole Hamels as the major leagues’ first eight-game winners, and the St. Louis Cardinals’ extended the Braves’ longest losing streak in two years to eight games with an 8-2 victory Monday.

Matheny said Lynn threw “probably his best game.” He said Lynn, who was making his 10th start of the season and 12th of his career, isn’t sneaking up on any teams.

“You figure at this point they’ve seen quite a bit of him and he’s not a secret in the league anymore,” Matheny said. “For him to go out on this start and make it his best one says a lot about him, to get a chance against the team that got him before.”

Lynn (8-1) allowed two runs and five hits in seven innings, striking out eight. While Lynn was dominating the Braves, Hamels pitched the Phillies to an 8-4 win at the Mets.

Lynn lost to the Braves 7-4 on May 13 in St. Louis.

“They played a great game against me that game in St. Louis and there was a little added incentive to be sure,” Lynn said.

Atlanta is on its worst skid since the Braves lost nine in a row from April 21-29, 2010. The Braves have fallen from first place to a last-place tie with the Phillies in the NL East at 26-24.

“We’ve got to turn this thing around — soon,” Braves catcher Brian McCann said. “We’ve just got to stay afloat. We hit a bump in the road. We have to bear down.”

Atlanta has given up seven runs or more in four straight games for the first time since five in a row from July 26-30, 2008, according to STATS LLC.

“We’ve always been known for our pitching, and we will,” Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez said. “We’re just going through a stretch right now.”

Daniel Descalso hit a two-run homer as a fill-in starter at third base for David Freese, who was given a day off with a mild sprain of his right hand.

Rafael Furcal had three hits, including a homer, and Matt Adams had three hits with three RBIs for St. Louis.

Marc Rzepczynski and Eduardo Sanchez followed Lynn with hitless relief, completing a five-hitter.

Atlanta’s Tommy Hanson (5-4) gave up a season-high six runs on eight hits in 3 1/3 innings.

“I don’t think anybody’s panicking right now. We’re still above .500 right now,” said Hanson, who had given up no more than two runs in his previous four starts.

Hanson left the bases loaded in the first and stranded a runner on third base in the second, then fell behind 4-0 in the third.

Matt Holliday singled and scored on McCann’s passed ball. After Carlos Beltran was caught in a rundown between third and home when he broke for the plate on a pitch, Yadier Molina singled in a run and Descalso followed with his second home run this season.

Furcal’s home run off Hanson and Adams’ RBI single off Kris Medlen made it 6-0 in the fourth.

Juan Francisco had a two-run single in the bottom half. Adams added a two-run double against Medlen in the sixth.

Braves first baseman Freddie Freeman didn’t start for the third straight day due to vision problems.

Freeman said he can’t wear contacts because his tear ducts aren’t producing. He can’t wear normal glasses when playing because he can’t see when hitting from his closed stance. He said he hopes prescription sports goggles will arrive Tuesday.

Atlanta arranged a Memorial Day surprise for the family of Air Force Sgt. David Sims in the middle of the fifth inning.

Sims’ wife, Robin, and four children were on the field to see his message to the family shown on the Braves video board. Sims, who has been serving in Afghanistan, emerged on the field after the video and was quickly engulfed by a group hug from his children, followed by a long embrace from his wife, as the crowd of 42,426 cheered.

— Associated Press —

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