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Mustangs stay hot with 9-3 win over Joplin

The St. Joseph Mustangs won their fifth consecutive game Saturday night with a 9-3 win over Joplin inside Phil Welch Stadium.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team improves to 26-7 and 21-7 in the MINK League.

The Mustangs had to rally from a 3-0 deficit as Joplin scored three runs in the third inning off St. Joseph starter Kyle Jackson.

St. Joe didn’t get on the scoreboard until the fifth inning when they tied the game at three and then took the lead for good with two runs in the sixth, three more in the seventh inning and one run in the eighth.

Jackson did not pick up the win as he lasted only 4.1 innings.  He gave up three runs on four hits and walked five.

Three Mustang reliever came in and allowed only one hit in 4.2 combined innings.  Royce Duncan earned the win with 2.1 innings of relief, while Ryan Price and Mark Robinette also shut down the Outlaws.

Brent Seifert led the way offensively with two hits and three RBI.  Jeff Roy drove in two with a home run, while Brock Chaffin and Kris Koerper added two hits and one RBI each.

St. Joseph is back at home Sunday for Military Appreciation Night at Phil Welch Stadium.  The Mustangs play the U.S.A. Military All-Stars at 6:00 p.m.   You can hear the game live on ESPN 1550.

Royals lose again to Colorado in Davies return

Associated Press

DENVER — Mark Ellis had three doubles in his second game with the Colorado Rockies, who also got a home run from Troy Tulowitzki in a 9-6 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Saturday night.

Ellis, Todd Helton and Tulowitzki each drove in two runs for Colorado, which finished with a season-high nine extra-base hits. Helton hit his 543rd double in the eighth, tying him with Hall of Famer Tony Gwynn for 24th on the career list.

The Rockies acquired Ellis, along with cash, from Oakland on Thursday for a minor league pitcher and a player to be named later. The veteran infielder had three hits and three RBIs in his Colorado debut Friday night, a 9-0 win over the Royals.

Alex Gordon had four hits and two RBIs for Kansas City, which has dropped five straight. Wilson Betemit had a pinch-hit three-run homer in the fourth.

Royals starter Kyle Davies lasted just three innings in his first start since May 16. The right-hander had been sidelined by right rotator cuff inflammation.

Davies (1-7) hurt himself with a throwing error during Colorado’s six-run second inning. Seth Smith had two hits and Ellis drove in a pair of runs with a double as the Rockies sent 11 men to the plate while building a 7-0 lead.

Greg Reynolds (3-0) made it through five innings for the Rockies, yielding five runs and eight hits. Reynolds was recalled from Triple-A Colorado Springs to sub for Jhoulys Chacin, whose start was pushed back to Tuesday because of right forearm stiffness.

Gordon hit an RBI single off Rafael Betancourt in the ninth before Huston Street came on and got Jeff Francoeur to pop up for the final out, earning his 24th save.

Colorado had scored 18 runs and rapped out 28 hits in the first two games of the series against Kansas City, improving to 8-6 in interleague play.

Francoeur had an RBI triple for the Royals, who dropped to 4-13 against the National League. Davies dropped to 0-6 with an 8.25 ERA in his last six starts.

Cardinals win streak snapped by Rays

Associated Press

Casey Kotchman gave the Tampa Bay Rays’ a much-needed offensive spark.

Kotchman drove in three runs with a double and Justin Ruggiano hit a two-run homer during a five-run sixth inning, helping the Rays beat the St. Louis Cardinals 5-1 on Saturday night.

“Casey has been rather clutch for us,” Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon said. “He seems to work a good at-bat, and obviously that was the turning point.”

Kotchman’s bases-clearing hit with two outs off Kyle McClellan (6-5) put the Rays ahead 3-1. Ruggiano followed with his fourth homer of the season to make it 5-1.

Tampa Bay, 20-21 at home this season, came in averaging just 3.1 runs at Tropicana Field, compared to 5.24 on the road.

Jeff Niemann (3-4) allowed one run and nine hits in six-plus innings. The right-hander had been 0-3 with a 6.65 ERA in his previous four home starts this year.

Tampa Bay designated hitter Johnny Damon moved past Boston Red Sox star Ted Williams, who had 2,654 hits, into 71st place on the all-time list with an opposite-field single to left leading off the first. Damon went 4-for-4 and has 2,658 hits overall.

“Ted Williams, to many, is the greatest hitter of all-time,” Damon said. “Obviously, he could have had more hits. He walked so many times. Spent five years of (military) service to our country. Having the Boston ties that I do have and knowing the history of that franchise and the history of Ted Williams, it’s a special moment.”

Damon played four seasons with the Red Sox, including the 2004 World Series championship team.

McClellan gave up five runs and eight hits over 5 2/3 innings. He has lost five of his last six decisions.

“It’s just a tough one to take,” McClellan said. “It’s disappointing that I let it happen.”

Lance Berkman put the Cardinals up 1-0 with his 21st homer this season in the fourth. He had two homers in Thursday night’s 9-6 win at Baltimore.

St. Louis, which had a four-game winning streak end, loaded the bases with one out later in the fourth but failed to increase the lead when Skip Schumaker hit into a double play.

Cesar Ramos replaced Niemann with two on and no outs in the seventh and retired Jon Jay on a fly ball. Juan Cruz then entered and got a double-play grounder from Matt Holliday.

Ruggiano made a nice sliding catch on Schumaker’s foul ball down the left-field line with two on and two outs in the second.

“We actually did a terrific job of getting innings started and just didn’t play good baseball,” Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said. “Didn’t do anything with it. We had some opportunties.”

Tampa Bay beat the Cardinals for the first time at home after dropping the first four meetings in Florida, including a three-game set in June 2005.

The Rays wore the home uniform of the 1951 Tampa Smokers, a Class B Florida International League team, on Turn Back the Clock Night. The Cardinals used their 1953 road uniform.

Mustangs win fourth in-a-row as they rally past Clarinda

The St. Joseph Mustangs scored two runs in the eighth inning Friday night at Phil Welch Stadium as they rallied for a 5-4 victory over Clarinda.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team led 3-0 after three innings, but the A’s tied the game with three runs in the fourth inning and took the lead with one in the sixth.

The Mustangs’ comeback began with a Kris Koerper walk to lead off the eighth inning and then Jon Wegener single to put two on with no one out.  Jeff Roy pinch ran for Koerper and T.J. Dailey sacrificed both runners into scoring position with one out.

St. Joseph manager Matt Johnson then subbed in Mark Robinette to pinch hit for Ryan Richardson and the move paid off.  Robinette singled with one out and drove in both runs to give the Mustangs the lead for good.

Wegener led the St. Joseph offense with two hits and two RBI, while Cameron Bentley also had two hits.  Jordan Guida had the other RBI for the Mustangs.

Ben Baker earned his second win of the week in relief.  He went 2.1 innings and allowed just one hit and no runs.

Kyle Hassna started the game and lasted five innings.  He gave up four runs on eight hits, while striking out four and walking one.  Doug Shields worked a perfect ninth for his fourth save of the season.

The Mustangs improve to 25-7 and 20-7 in the MINK League.  They’re back at home Saturday night as they host Joplin at 7:00 p.m. inside Phil Welch Stadium.

Royals get blanked in opener at Colorado

Associated Press

Mark Ellis and Juan Nicasio put on quite a show, maybe even upstaging the fireworks display that drew the capacity crowd to Coors Field in the first place.

Ellis had three hits, including a two-run homer, in his Colorado debut and Nicasio allowed three singles over eight innings as the Rockies beat the slumping Kansas City Royals 9-0 on Friday night.

Even Ellis couldn’t have envisioned this type of start to his career in the Mile High City. He finished a triple shy of the cycle and drove in three runs.

“A beautiful night, a sellout crowd and we won 9-0. A perfect night,” said Ellis, who was acquired from the Oakland Athletics on Thursday.

It had to be the cleats.

Before the game, Ellis asked Troy Tulowitzki if he could borrow a pair of the smooth-fielding shortstop’s black-and-purple shoes, even inquiring if they might come with some of Tulowitzki’s tremendous power inside them.

Tulowitzki said they didn’t possess any extra pop.

But Tulowitzki was mistaken. Ellis hit a liner in the fifth that just crept over the wall in left.

“Just see the ball and hit the ball,” explained Ellis, who hit his second homer of the season. “That’s what I try to do. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t.”

Tulowitzki connected on a two-run homer, Todd Helton added a two-run double and pinch-hitter Charlie Blackmon lined the first homer of his major league career — on his 25th birthday, no less — to help the Rockies snap a two-game slide.

Nicasio (3-1) struck out four and got the Royals to hit into 16 groundouts. With his pitch count at 111, the rookie righty was pulled in the ninth for reliever Edgmer Escalona, who was just called up from Triple-A Colorado Springs on Friday.

Nicasio improved to 3-0 at Coors Field, lowering his ERA to 2.08 at the notoriously hitter-friendly park. Although this field may haunt some pitchers, it forces Nicasio to bear down.

“I’m able to focus more on throwing things down in the strike zone,” Nicasio said through his interpreter, Ubaldo Jimenez. “For sure, that was the best game that I have thrown.”

Only one Kansas City runner reached as far as second base all night, and that wasn’t until two outs in the ninth.

Danny Duffy (1-3) couldn’t break the Royals out of their funk as the team dropped its fourth straight. Duffy lasted five innings, allowing five runs and nine hits. He struck out six.

The lefty had trouble locating his fastball, leaving pitches up to Ellis and Tulowitzki, who both laced homers.

“I made a couple of mistakes. I thought I threw the ball pretty well, I just didn’t come out on top today,” Duffy said.

Ellis started things off on the right foot, collecting a single in his first at bat.

It was simply that kind of game for Ellis.

He also played flawless second base, already developing quite a chemistry with Tulowitzki as the tandem turned a nifty double play early in the game.

The Rockies acquired Ellis, along with cash, from Oakland on Thursday for a minor league pitcher and a player to be named later.

They are banking on him to provide consistency at second base, something the team has sorely missed all season. They have trotted out Chris Nelson, Jonathan Herrera, Eric Young Jr. and Jose Lopez, who’s since been let go.

Nelson and Young were optioned to Colorado Springs before the game.

Helton finished with four hits, including the 542nd double of his career. He’s tied with Hall of Famer Harry Heilmann for 25th place on all-time list.

Nicasio has been a pleasant surprise for the Rockies since being called up from Double-A Tulsa in late May. What was billed as an audition has pretty much turned into a permanent spot in the rotation.

With plenty of movement on all his pitches, Nicasio has been difficult for the opposition to hit this season. He also boasts a fastball that hovers around 94 mph.

“He threw the ball very well, he threw his fastball for strikes, got in on us, kept the ball down,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “The strike zone was a tiny strike zone and he did a good job of keeping the ball in it. He threw more breaking balls for strikes than I thought he would.

“He’s got good stuff. He’s a good young pitcher,” he said.

The Rockies had to shuffle around their rotation after their top pitcher, Jhoulys Chacin, experienced some tightness in his right forearm.

Chacin will have his scheduled start Saturday pushed back until Tuesday. To take his place, the Rockies will recall Greg Reynolds from Colorado Springs.

The 23-year-old Chacin is 8-5 with a 3.10 ERA. Rockies manager Jim Tracy doesn’t want to take any chances, especially in light of losing lefty Jorge De La Rosa with a season-ending elbow injury.

“We could ill afford to lose a guy like this,” Tracy said.

Cardinals win at Tampa Bay for fourth straight win

Associated Press

Colby Rasmus’ home run set off fireworks on and off the field.

Rasmus hit a three-run shot during a wild eighth inning that featured four ejections, leading the St. Louis Cardinals past the Tampa Bay Rays 5-3 on Friday night.

“Colby’s got so much talent,” Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said. “When he gets into a game, a lot of good things happen. If he can keep that up, good at-bats, what a huge asset he would be.”

Jake Westbrook gave up two hits in seven scoreless innings for St. Louis, which has won four straight.

Rasmus, who also had a run-scoring groundout during the second inning, connected against J.P. Howell for his fourth homer in the last seven games and No. 9 on the season. The drive to right led to three ejections.

Howell was thrown out by plate umpire Vic Carapazza after the left-hander threw his glove to the ground after the homer and also spiked the new ball tossed to him by the umpire.

“The one he was giving me wasn’t good enough. I wanted a new ball, and he took it personal,” Howell said. “We’re supposed to take it but he can’t take it, and if he’s allowed to ring me, that’s the way it is. They’re human too, and you gotta move on, and I know he’ll be better down the road.”

Howell walked toward the plate area and had to be restrained. Rasmus crossed the plate while the arguing continued.

“I didn’t think his beef was with me, you know,” Rasmus said. “I understand. I know the game is tough. Maybe he’s falling on some hard times. Just mad at the world or whatever it may be. Some things didn’t go his way. I just hit the ball, run around, touch the plate and take my happy self back to the dugout.”

First base umpire Doug Eddings ejected Rays pitcher David Price and reserve infielder Elliot Johnson for comments made from the dugout.

“I was just trying to defend my teammate,” Johnson said. “It just seemed like (umpire Dana) DeMuth came in from second base and it seemed like he kind of lost control of himself in that situation. It just seemed like he was yelling at J.P. and I was just trying to defend him. I wasn’t swearing at the man or name-calling or anything like that.”

Earlier in the eighth, Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon was ejected by Carapazza for arguing from the dugout after Lance Berkman drew a two-out walk on 3-2 pitch.

DeMuth said Howell was tossed for arguing balls and strikes, and the glove spike got the umpires’ attention.

“The home plate asked him, ‘Was that directed toward me?'” DeMuth said. “I’m glad it only end up with (four ejections). It was headed for more.”

Westbrook (7-4) struck out seven and walked three in his first victory since June 7 at Houston. The right-hander was 0-1 with a 6.61 ERA in his previous three starts.

“Outstanding,” La Russa said. “Just kept going after them. He was in command of his delivery, his emotions, his concentration.”

Tampa Bay scored three times in the eighth. Evan Longoria had a run-scoring double and Matt Joyce added a two-run homer against Lance Lynn. Longoria has driven in 14 runs over his last seven games.

“I thought we were kind of flat at the beginning of the game,” Maddon said. “I was kind of annoyed with that. We just had a day off Thursday and we didn’t have a day off listed for Friday, so I was a little upset with that.”

Fernando Salas pitched the ninth for his 14th save.

The Cardinals grabbed a 2-0 lead against Wade Davis (7-6) in the second inning. Yadier Molina hit an RBI single to snap an 0-for-13 slide.

Davis allowed six hits in seven innings. He had won his previous three starts.

Westbrook worked out of two-on, two-out jams in the second and third before striking out Sam Fuld with a runner on third to end the fourth.

“It took me a little while to get into a groove,” Westbrook said. “Once I did, I made some pitches early on when I needed to.”

The Cardinals are playing just their second ever road series against Tampa Bay. St. Louis swept the previous three-game set at Tropicana Field in June 2005.

Nebraska announces 2011 Football Hall of Fame inductees

NU Sports Information

The National Football Foundation Hall of Fame’s Nebraska Chapter president, Irv Veitzer, is pleased to announce Nebraska Football Hall of Fame’s Class of 2011.

The five former Husker standouts voted into the Hall by Chapter membership include defensive tackle Carel Stith (1965-66), linebacker Bob Terrio (1970-71), middle guard Lawrence Pete (1986-88), rover Mike Brown (1996-99) and cornerback Ralph Brown II (1996-99).

The two players from the Nebraska Sate College/University four-year level, voted into the Hall by Chapter membership, are offensive/defensive end Jimmy Jones (1962-65) of Omaha University (now University of Nebraska at Omaha) and offensive guard Dave Meyer (1972-75) of Midland Lutheran College (now Midland Lutheran University).

Leo McKillip, former head football coach (1985-92) at Dana College in Blair, Neb., was voted by Board Decree as recipient of the Chapter’s Coaching Hall of Fame honor.

The Chapter’s Clarence E. Swanson Meritorious Service Award will be presented to Jay and Kim Noddle of Omaha, for their strong support of the Nebraska Athletic Department and the University’s football program.

The Lyell Bremser Special Merit Award recipients are Bruce and Darla Evertson of Kimball, Neb., in honor of their generous contributions to Nebraska’s football program and to the Athletic Department in general.

Induction and award ceremonies will be held Friday evening, Sept. 9, 2011 at the West Stadium Club with on-field pre-game recognition extended to all honorees at the Nebraska-Fresno State game on Saturday, Sept. 10.

KU’s Henrickson adds Lee to women’s basketball staff

KU Sports Information

Kansas women’s basketball coach Bonnie Henrickson announced the addition of Alaina Lee to her staff Friday. A former guard at Murray State University, Lee will serve as the Jayhawks’ assistant director of operations and video coordinator.

She replaces Katie Capps, who was promoted to KU’s director of operations.

“We’re very excited to bring someone of Alaina’s caliber to our program,” said Henrickson. “I first met her four years ago and her passion for young people and the sport of basketball is something that has always stood out to me. Her background in education and her experience coaching at many different levels will be extremely beneficial to the Jayhawk basketball program.”

A four-year letterwinner at Murray State University, Lee started for three seasons and was a member of the Ohio Valley Conference Championship team in 2008 that advanced to the program’s first-ever NCAA Tournament berth. Lee ended her career second in program history having appeared in 114 games and ranked 22nd with 861 career points.

Lee, a native of Houston, Texas, spent two seasons as an assistant coach at Blinn College in Brenham, Texas from 2008-10. During her time with the Buccaneers, Lee was the team’s recruiting coordinator in addition to assisting players with skill development and weight training. She also worked with two-time all-region selection Brateicka Mock, while Blinn qualified for regionals both seasons.

Lee’s coaching resume also includes stints as a head coach and assistant coach in the Houston Elite AAU basketball program and as head basketball coach at the E.O. Smith Educational Center, where she also served as a physical education teacher.

A member of the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA), Lee graduated from Murray State in 2008 with a bachelor’s degree in health and physical education.

Kansas City signs 21st-round pick Swab

Royals Media Relations

The Kansas City Royals announced today that the club has signed 21st-round selection from the 2011 MLB First-Year Player Draft, catcher Kenny Swab.  The Royals have now inked 25 of the club’s 50 selections from last month’s draft.  In addition, the Royals have signed 11 non-drafted free agents.

Swab, 22, helped lead the University of Virginia to the College World Series in June where the Cavaliers went 2-2 and were eliminated by eventual champion South Carolina.  The 6-foot-1, 195-pound catcher batted .318 with 17 doubles, two triples, one home run, 29 RBI and 44 runs scored in 59 games (56 starts) for Virginia, stealing 11 bases in 12 attempts.  A native of Kernersville, N.C., Swab was selected by the Cincinnati Reds out of Young Harris Junior College in the 48th round of the 2009 draft, but chose to attend Virginia.  He was also tabbed by the Atlanta Braves in the 35th round in 2010, but elected to return for his senior season.

Mustangs win third straight with 11-3 win over Diamond Spirit

The St. Joseph Mustangs took advantage of eight walks and two hit batters Thursday night and cruised to an 11-3 MINK League win at home against the Omaha Diamond Spirit.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team jumped out to another early lead as they scored four runs on just one hit in the first inning, and then they broke open a 4-2 game by scoring six runs on two hits in the fifth.

Four Omaha pitchers combined to give up the ten free passes and the Diamond Spirit also committed two errors.

Cameron Bentley was the only Mustang with mulitple hits as he finished 2-for-5 with two RBI.  Mark Robinette went 1-for-3 with four RBI, while Kris Koerper and Landinn Eckhardt also drove in one run.

Andrew Polly (2-2) went six innings to earn the win on the mound.  He allowed two runs on six hits, while striking out two and walking only one.

St. Joseph improves to 24-7 and 19-7 in the MINK League.  They’re won three in-a-row and four of their last five games.  The Mustangs are back at home Saturday as they entertain Clarinda at 7:00 p.m. inside Phil Welch Stadium.

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