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MWSU kicker Tyler Basch named to Fred Mitchell Award watch list

ST. JOSEPH – Missouri Western senior kicker Tyler Basch was named to the Fred Mitchell Award 2018 Kickoff Watch List. The Fred Mitchell Award is an annual postseason award presented to the nation’s top non-FBS collegiate place-kicker for performance on the field and in the community.

Over 750 kickers across the nation are eligible for the Fred Mitchell Award. Basch was one of only 34 kickers named to the Preseason Watch List. The list includes kickers from 22 states and two countries, representing FCS, Division II, Division III, and NAIA institutions. Basch was the lone MIAA representative on the list and one of just 11 from NCAA Division II members. The full list released by the Fred Mitchell Award can be viewed here.

Basch enters the 2018 season as one of the top returning kickers in the nation. The 2017 second team All-MIAA selection led the MIAA with 17 (17-20) made field goals last season. Basch was also named MIAA Special Teams Player of the Week after going 4-for-4 against Lindenwood in week six. Basch was perfect from inside 40 yards, going 10-for-10 on attempts from those distances. Two of his three missed field goal attempts were from beyond 50 yards.

The watch list for the Fred Mitchell Award is released in August. Top performers are recognized monthly during the college football season, with the winner announced in mid-December.

— MWSU Athletics —

Royals fall short of sweep, lose to Cleveland 12-5

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jason Kipnis had been mired in such a batting slump that the Indians second baseman had resorted to watching old film of himself, trying to discover what had changed in the past couple years.

He finally noticed a subtle, almost imperceptible difference in his hand position, so he rolled up a magazine and began mimicking his old swing in his hotel room. And while it felt a bit odd, and looked just as goofy, Kipnis nevertheless went to sleep feeling as if something had finally clicked.

Did it ever.

Kipnis proceeded to club four hits and drive in four runs Sunday, the big shot an inside-the-park homer in the ninth inning, to lead Cleveland’s 12-5 rout of the Kansas City Royals.

“Obviously every day I’ve been working to snap out of it. It’s been ugly to watch and worse to go out there,” said Kipnis, who is still hitting just .223 this season. “I came in with better spirits and said, `Let’s see where it goes from here.”

Kipnis nearly went 5 for 5, but a baserunning mix-up by Melky Cabrera on his flyball in the second resulted in a fielder’s choice. Kipnis later had a pair of singles and a double before the homer.

“He swung the bat very well,” Indians manager Terry Francona said, “and I’ll tell you what, what a lift that would give us. He’s showed flashes, but if he could get hot, what a lift it would be.”

Shane Bieber (8-2) allowed four runs for Cleveland — on homers by Whit Merrifield, Salvador Perez and Lucas Duda. He departed after allowing six hits and striking out seven in 5 1/3 innings, but it was still enough for the AL Central-leading Indians to improve to 10-1 when facing a series sweep.

Right-hander Jorge Lopez (0-4) allowed five runs, all in the fourth inning, on five hits and three walks for Kansas City. He was lifted after throwing 79 pitches in just four innings.

“You give a chance to your guys when you go deep in a game and I couldn’t do it today. I need to get better for sure,” Lopez said. “We’ll see about going forward from this start.”

The Royals, who had snapped their own five-game skid Friday night, looked as if they’d keep their momentum going when Merrifield took Bieber deep to left field leading off the game.

It was his fifth career leadoff homer and second this year.

But the Indians answered with their big fourth inning, when six consecutive batters reached on four hits and a pair of walks. And after Perez went deep in the bottom half, the Indians added two more runs on Francisco Lindor’s two-out single in the sixth to add to their cushion.

Edwin Encarnacion continued the offensive outburst — which came after the Indians were held to one run on five hits on Saturday night — when he took Royals reliever Jake Newberry deep in the eighth.

“It’s been a tough trip for a lot of guys, but they’re going to be OK,” Francona said. “We needed to find a way today, whether it was ugly or whatever, and we did that.”

O’HEARN IN LF

Royals 1B/DH Ryan O’Hearn got the start in left field, the first time he’s played the outfield in the big leagues. O’Hearn played 13 games there at Triple-A Omaha this season, and manager Ned Yost said the move was designed to “find a way to keep his bat in there.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Indians: RHP Cody Anderson (Tommy John surgery) struck out two in a scoreless inning Saturday night for the club’s Arizona League team. It was his first game since September 2016. “No red flags or anything,” Francona said. … OF Brandon Guyer is getting a couple days off after getting hit where the foot meets the ankle, or as Francona called it, the “fankle.”

Royals: RHP Ian Kennedy (left oblique strain) threw 60 pitches last Friday without any problems and expects to make a rehab start Wednesday, Yost said. … OF Jorge Soler (fractured left toe) will begin a rehab assignment in the next couple of days, but even then he is unlikely to play in the outfield. “I don’t think so,” Yost said. “DH him some, give him some at-bats, make sure he’s ready to go for spring training, which he will be.”

UP NEXT

The Indians and Royals will both take Monday off before beginning their next series. Cleveland is back home to face Minnesota with Carlos Carrasco (15-7, 3.55 ERA) on the mound, and Kansas City begins a five-game trip to Detroit and Baltimore with Jakob Junis (6-12, 4.70 ERA) getting the first start.

— Associated Press —

Carpenter ties Cards record with 4 2Bs in rout of Rockies

DENVER (AP) — Matt Carpenter led off the game with a double to right.

It was the start of a double feature — a big day for him and another big series win for the Cardinals.

Carpenter tied a St. Louis record with four doubles, pitcher Austin Gomber had a two-run infield single in a six-run first inning and the Cardinals routed the Colorado Rockies 12-3 on Sunday.

Carpenter matched a franchise mark that Joe “Ducky” Medwick set on Aug. 4, 1937, against the Boston Bees (now Braves). Carpenter doubled twice in the first, had another in the third and lined his fourth in the seventh on a day when St. Louis pounded out 16 hits. The first baseman wound up 4 for 5 with two RBI.

The Cardinals took two of three from the Rockies in a series between NL playoff contenders. It was the ninth straight series St. Louis has captured.

“I don’t know why it couldn’t last for the rest of the year,” Carpenter said. “I don’t see why it shouldn’t, why it couldn’t.”

The score was 6-0 before many of the fans even had time to settle into their seats. The Cardinals sent 11 batters to the plate in a wild first and had seven hits off Tyler Anderson, including a two-run homer by Tyler O’Neill. Anderson later intentionally walked Yairo Munoz to get to Gomber, who bounced a high hopper for an infield hit. A hustling Harrison Bader scored from second.

The runs in the first were scored with two outs.

“For us to come out early and put up that 6-spot, it makes my job a lot easier,” Gomber said.

Wearing “Big G” on the back of his uniform as part of Players’ Weekend, Gomber (4-0) threw six efficient innings and allowed two runs, one earned, to become the first left-handed Cardinals starter to win at Coors Field since Kent Mercker on July 24, 1999.

“Does it show how well (Gomber pitched) or show how few lefties we’ve had?” Carpenter joked. “Gomber was outstanding.”

Despite St. Louis leading 10-2 after three innings, the crowd predominantly stayed around. This provided a big incentive: A screening of “The Sandlot” at the ballpark following the game.

Anderson (6-7) was booed as he walked off the mound after allowing six runs and getting just two outs. He was replaced by Chad Bettis.

The left-hander has been tinkering with a new release point to better utilize his 6-foot-3 frame. He hasn’t won since July 4, and has a 15.09 ERA over his last three outings.

“Whatever I was trying to go to wasn’t working,” Anderson said. “Sometimes when you’re making pitches they’re on the corners, and sometimes they’re just off. Sometimes when you’re going for the corners you miss middle, which is what’s been happening.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: RHP Mike Mayers was placed on the 10-day DL with shoulder inflammation and RHP Dominic Leone (right arm nerve irritation) was activated from the 60-day DL. Leone pitched a perfect ninth. … 2B Kolten Wong wasn’t in the starting lineup a day after straining his left hamstring running out a grounder.

Rockies: OF Charlie Blackmon was rested.

EXPOUNDING ON EXPANDING ROSTERS

Although active rosters are expanding at the end of the month, manager Bud Black would like to see a cap on the number of players that can be used on game day. For instance, a maximum of 27.

“Now you’re talking,” Black said. “For five months, you play a certain roster and then at the most critical time of the year you have all this weaponry, potentially, at your disposal. I don’t know if that’s right.”

M-V-P

Carpenter heard the “M-V-P!” chants from fans after the game.

“It was a neat experience,” he said.

One of his main rivals for the award figures to be Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado.

DID HE DO THAT?

The talk after the game was about Bader scoring from second on Gomber’s chopper. It certainly impressed Carpenter.

“You don’t see that very often. He’s just a special baserunner,” Carpenter said.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Jack Flaherty (7-6, 2.97 ERA) takes the mound Tuesday when the Cardinals open a three-game series against Pittsburgh. Flaherty needs six strikeouts to reach 150 and tie Paul Dean (1934) for sixth-most in a season for a rookie in Cardinals history.

Rockies: Start a two-game series Monday at the Los Angeles Angels. RHP Jon Gray (10-7, 4.67) goes for Colorado.

— Associated Press —

Griffon volleyball improves to 4-0 with sweeps over UIS, Walsh

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. – Four matches and four sweeps for the Missouri Western volleyball team on the opening weekend of the season at the Illinois Springfield Capital Classic. Missouri Western swept Illinois Springfield and Walsh on Saturday to start the season perfect.

ON THE DAY
Missouri Western hit a modest .260 on the day but held its two opponents to a .105 attack percentage. The Griffons recorded seven services aces over the two matches and had 11 total blocks. Stephanie Doak led the team with 25 kills and four of the aces. Doak also had three blocks. Shellby Taylor had 18 kills and five total blocks. Lauren Murphy had 72 assists, averaging 12 per set. Audrey Keim led the team with 28 digs. Tiana Butler had 27.

AT ILLINOIS SPRINGFIELD
After taking a back-and-forth first set, 25-23, Missouri Western was in danger of dropping its first set of the season in the second. Illinois Springfield staked a 20-17 lead that prompted a MWSU timeout. The break sparked a late run by the Griffons that resulted in another 25-23 Griffon win. Missouri Western held off a late charge by the Prairie Stars to seal the sweep, 25-22. Doak had 13 kills and three total blocks in the match. Shellby Taylor added 10 kills on a .391 percentage with two blocks. Tiana Butler led the team with a career-high 20 digs.

VS WALSH
Missouri Western held Walsh to a .000 hitting percentage in the match. In a 25-9 second set, the Griffons hit.444 with just two total errors, one attack and one service. Doak added 12 kills in the second match of the day along with three aces. Lauren Murphy had 34 assists and 10 digs. Ali Tauchen hit .438 with nine kills and added four blocks.

UP NEXT
Missouri Western heads to one of the top NCAA Division II volleyball classics when the team plays in the Colorado Premier Challenge. The Griffons open at co-host Regis on Aug. 31 before taking on Angelo State later in the day. The event is bracketed after the first day, so the Griffons’ Sept. 1 opponents will be determined based on the day one results.

— MWSU Athletics —

Royals win second straight against Cleveland

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Rookie Heath Fillmyer pitched six strong innings, Lucas Duda homered and the Kansas City Royals beat Corey Kluber and the Cleveland Indians 7-1 on Saturday night.

Fillmyer (2-1) limited the AL Central leaders to three hits and two walks, striking out three, as the Indians lost their fourth straight, matching their longest skid of the season.

Kansas City pounded out 14 hits, nine against Kluber (16-7), who went 5 1/3 innings, allowing five runs with two walks and six strikeouts.

Duda hit his 12th homer this season and the 150th of his career in the sixth, a solo shot to right-center field. Two batters later, Hunter Dozier drove in Jorge Bonifacio with a single to put the Royals ahead 5-1 and drive Kluber from the game.

Duda had three hits and scored twice, while Ryan O’Hearn drove in three runs. Prior to 2018, Duda was 3 for 36 in his career against the Indians, but he has eight extra-base hits in 11 games against Cleveland this year, batting .275 (11 for 40).

Cleveland scored its only run in the second when Fillmyer balked to bring in Yonder Alonso, who had moved to third on the first of Melky Cabrera’s two doubles. Three relievers completed the five-hitter.

In the third, Adalberto Mondesi singled, stole second without a throw and scored on Whit Merrifield’s hit to right. The stolen base was the first against Kluber in 250 1/3 innings.

O’Hearn’s double scored Salvador Perez and Duda to give the Royals a 3-1 lead in the fourth.

Merrifield doubled to bring Mondesi in the seventh, and O’Hearn’s eighth-inning single brought in Duda, who had doubled to lead off the inning.

Kluber had his five-game win streak against the Royals snapped, and Kansas City’s five runs were its most against him since June 15, 2016, when the Royals last beat the reigning AL Cy Young Award winner.

UP NEXT

Seeking their first series sweep in more than a month, the last-place Royals send Jorge Lopez (0-2, 3.99 ERA) to the mound for his third start since being acquired in the trade that sent Mike Moustakas to the Brewers. Shane Bieber (7-2, 4.36) starts for Cleveland.

— Associated Press —

Northwest Missouri State volleyball stays unbeaten with two wins Saturday

TOPEKA, Kansas – The Northwest Missouri State University volleyball squad put the finishing touches on an unblemished weekend with a 3-0 victory over Dallas Baptist at the Washburn Invitational. The Bearcats won by set scores of 25-19, 25-10, 25-23.

Northwest (4-0 overall) did not drop a set in each of its four matches against Colorado State-Pueblo, Southeastern Oklahoma State, Henderson State and Dallas Bapist.

The opening set against Dallas Baptist featured 11 ties and six lead changes before the Bearcats pulled away late for a 25-19 triumph. The set was deadlocked at 17-17 before Northwest used a 7-0 run to gain separation.

The Bearcats raced out to a commanding 9-1 lead in the second set en route to a 25-10 victory. Northwest recorded 14 kills and a .375 hitting percentage in the second stanza, while limiting Dallas Baptist to five kills and four errors (.048).

Dallas Baptist held a 4-2 lead early in the third set before a 6-0 run by Northwest gave the Bearcats an advantage it would not relinquish. Dallas Baptist pulled to within one point on six occasions in the remainder of the set but could not knot it up. Northwest held a 24-20 lead and was able to close it out, 25-23.

Senior Maddy Bruder recorded a match-high 10 kills. Sophomore Maddy Ahrens pitched in with 27 assists and 10 digs for her second double-double on the season. Senior Olivia Nowakowski tallied a match-high 16 digs to go along with five service aces.

Northwest was limited to .192 hitting percentage – its lowest total of the season. The Bearcats had hit .319 or higher in each of their previous three wins to start the 2018 season.

Northwest will head to the Rockhurst Tournament next weekend in Kansas City, Missouri. Northwest will take on William Jewel on Friday at 9 a.m., followed by Colorado Mesa at 5:30 p.m. The Bearcats will tangle two more times on Saturday against Sioux Falls at 3:30 p.m. and against tournament host Rockhurst at 7:30 p.m.

NOTES: Head coach Amy Woerth has posted 96 career wins … Northwest is 4-0 to start a season for the first time since winning its first 15 games in 2016 … Northwest has a .319 hitting percentage through its first four matches … Sofia Schleppenbach has posted a team-best 13 service aces.

— Northwest Athletics —

Griffon volleyball rolls to two sweeps on opening day of 2018 season

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. – The Missouri Western volleyball team began its 2018 season much like it ended the 2017 regular season. Missouri Western made quick work of Cedarville (3-0) and McKendree (3-0) to go 2-0 at the Illinois Springfield Capital Classic.

THE DAY
On the day, Missouri Western hit .416 as a team while holding its opponents to a .064 hitting percentage. The Griffons averaged 13.3 kills per set while allowing just 8.8. Sam Duncan had a breakout performance, totaling 20 kills and hitting .340. Shellby Taylor had 15 kills and hit .682 on the day with four total blocks. Audrey Keim posted 38 digs, starting both matches at Libero.

VS. CEDARVILLE
The Griffons opened the day by taking care of Cedarville, 25-17, 25-12 and 25-11 to take the first match of the season. Sam Duncan led MWSU with a career-high 12 kills and Audrey Keim posted a career-high 19 digs in the sweep of Cedarville. The Griffons hit .500 in each of the first two sets and .391 in the third to hit .467 in the match. They held Cedarville to a .030 hitting percentage.

VS. MCKENDREE
An 18-5 rally in the first set against McKendree set the tone for a 25-14, 25-15, 25-20 win in the afternoon match for MWSU. The Griffons hit .372 against McKendree and limited the Bearcats to a .097 hitting percentage, including -.125 in the first set. Murphy posted 34 assists in game two. Stephanie Doak led the Griffons with 11 kills while Keim matched her game one personal-best with 19 digs.

UP NEXT
The Griffons play two more matches in Springfield on Saturday, taking on host Illinois Springfield at 1 p.m. before wrapping the opening weekend against Walsh at 5:30 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

O’Hearn, Dozier hit back-to-back HRs in 9th as Royals rally past Indians

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Ryan O’Hearn and Hunter Dozier hit back-to-back home runs leading off the ninth inning against Cleveland closer Cody Allen to lift the Kansas City Royals over the Indians 5-4 on Friday night.

After a broken water pipe near the outfield fountains led to a half-hour delay in the fourth, the Royals and Indians put on a splashy finish.

Cleveland’s Yonder Alonso hit his second homer of the game in the eighth, a two-run shot for a 4-3 lead. Alonso also had a solo shot in the fourth, moments before the right field warning track flooded.

O’Hearn and Dozier then rescued Kansas City from a sixth straight loss with their homers off Allen (4-5). O’Hearn, a rookie first baseman, tied it with a blast into the left field bullpen, and Dozier followed with a wall-scraper to right-center field.

Allen has blown four saves this season and let his ERA rise to 4.50. Wily Peralta (1-0) got the victory for Kansas City, which had just been swept over four games by Tampa Bay.

Royals All-Star catcher Salvador Perez promised a wheelchair-bound fan, Colin Couch, that he would hit a home run after meeting him on the field before the game, according to the team’s Twitter page and broadcaster Steve Physioc.

After Whit Merrifield opened the game with a walk and Alex Gordon followed with a single, Perez made good on the promise by smashing a 454-foot, opposite-field home run — the longest home run for the Royals this season — into Kauffman Stadium’s iconic right field fountains.

A pipe burst near those fountains a few innings later, delaying the game for 30 minutes. Water began leaking onto the field with two outs in the top of the fourth. Relievers in the Royals’ bullpen yelled to alert stadium and game officials to the problem, triggering the stoppage.

As maintenance personnel worked to stop the flow of water, more than a dozen grounds crew members armed with squeegees wicked water from the warning track as it poured from under the fence. They created a sandbag barrier to keep standing water from reaching the outfield grass.

Rookie right-hander Brad Keller shrugged off the unusual delay, which came after Yan Gomes’ double, and struck out Greg Allen to get of the inning with the lead.

Home plate umpire Ramon DeJesus ejected Royals bench coach Dale Sveum during Brantley’s at-bat leading off the eighth inning. It was Sveum’s 16th career ejection — 10 as a manager, five as an assistant coach and once as a player.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: RHP Ian Kennedy (left oblique strain) threw a simulated game. Kennedy hasn’t pitched since July 10 at Minnesota. … RF Jorge Soler (left toe fracture) took some swings against Kennedy during the simulated game. … RHP Jesse Hahn underwent surgery to repair the ulnar collateral ligament in his pitching elbow a few weeks ago. It was not a reconstruction, commonly known as Tommy John surgery, but Hahn is expected to be sidelined at least six months. He suffered the UCL strain in March and had worked his way back to Triple-A through the rehab process, which started last month, before the surgery.

Indians: LHP Andrew Miller (right knee inflammation) returned Aug. 3 from the 60-day disabled list, but he’s only appeared in nine games during the last three weeks. Indians manager Terry Francona said Friday that the priority is using Miller in situations when a win is on the line. When he’s not available, it taxes the bullpen — which is down to seven pitchers, including two situational arms. Relief will come when the rosters expand Sept. 1. … RHP Nick Goody has been sidelined with right elbow inflammation since May 3. He will have season-ending arthroscopic surgery on his elbow “sometime next week,” but the ulnar collateral ligament is intact, Francona said. … RHP Cody Anderson pitched off the mound in Arizona for the first time since having Tommy John surgery in March 2017.

UP NEXT

Two-time Cy Young Award winner RHP Corey Kluber (16-6) gets the nod for the Indians in the second game of a three-game series. He is 2-0 with a 2.08 ERA in two previous starts this season against the Royals, who send rookie RHP Heath Filmyer (1-1) for the 6:15 p.m. first pitch.

— Associated Press —

Northwest Missouri State volleyball wins two matches Friday

TOPEKA, Kansas – The Northwest Missouri State University volleyball squad got its second sweep of the day at the Washburn Invitational with a 3-0 triumph over Southeastern Oklahoma State University. Northwest won by set scores of 25-15, 25-19, 25-16.

Northwest senior Maddy Bruder posted her 1,000 career dig in the victory. Bruder has tallied 1,001 career digs in a Bearcat uniform. Bruder posted 11 kills and eight digs in the match.

Freshman Rachael Sturdevant posted a team-best 13 kills with a .632 hitting percentage to lead the Bearcats to the victory.

Northwest hit .314 with 45 kills and only 13 attack errors. The Bearcats tallied eight blocks against the Savage Storm.

The Bearcats gained advantage early in the match with a .400 hitting percentage in the opening set. Northwest recorded 15 kills and three errors, while holding the Savage Storm to a .179 hitting percentage.

The second set was much tighter with six ties and five lead changes, but the Bearcats pulled away late for a 25-19 triumph.

Northwest belted 13 kills against two errors in the final set and never trailed en route to a 25-16 win.

The Bearcats will be back in action tomorrow with matches against Henderson State (1-1 overall) at 9 a.m. and against Dallas Baptist (1-1) at 1 p.m.

— Northwest Athletics —

Mikolas, O’Neill homer to help Cardinals beat Rockies 7-5

DENVER (AP) — Miles Mikolas and Tyler O’Neill each homered to help St. Louis to an early lead and the Cardinals withstood a rally by Colorado to beat the Rockies 7-5 Friday night for their fourth straight win.

O’Neill also had an RBI double and Kolten Wong added three hits and a sacrifice fly for the Cardinals in a game between teams in the thick of their respective division races and running 1-2 in the NL wild-card race.

The Rockies pulled within two runs with a five-run fifth that featured a two-run drive by Charlie Blackmon and a solo shot by Nolan Arenado, both off Mikolas, who helped St. Louis take a 7-0 lead by hitting a two-run homer as part of a four-run second.

Mikolas had stranded five base runners over the first four innings but could not get out of the fifth. He was relieved by Chasen Shreve after Carlos Gonzalez scored from third on Ian Desmond’s fielder’s choice and Ryan McMahon hit a two-out RBI single that drove in Desmond, who had reached third on second baseman Wong’s throwing error.

Carlos Martinez (7-6) picked up the victory with 1 2/3 innings of hitless relief.

Bud Norris gave up a two-out double to Ryan McMahon and walked pinch-hitter Chris Iannetta before retiring D.J. LeMahieu on a fielder’s choice for his 27th save in 31 opportunities.

Leading off the second, O’Neill drove a 1-2 offering from Antonio Senzatela (4-4) deep into the left-field bleachers for his fifth home run of the season, marking the 16th straight game in which the Cardinals homered. The streak is the longest since St. Louis connected in a club-record 25 straight games in 2016.

Jedd Gyorko worked a one-out walk and Wong singled before Senzatela struck out Harrison Bader. But after Gyorko scored from third on a passed ball, Mikolas homered over the wall in straightaway center for his second of the season. The right-hander also homered for his first big league hit April 2 at Milwaukee.

The Cardinals added three runs in the fifth, moving out to a 7-0 lead on run-scoring doubles by Gyorko and O’Neill and a sacrifice fly by Wong.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: RHP Michael Wacha threw 3 2/3 scoreless innings Thursday night in his second rehab start for Class A Palm Beach against Fort Myers. He’s expected to throw a bullpen session Sunday before making a third rehab start on Tuesday, most likely at Class AA Springfield. Wacha went on the 10-day disabled list June 21 with a left oblique strain. “He’s in the conversation to come back and pitch in early September but what day that looks like — he’s not there yet,” interim manager Mike Shildt said.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP John Gant (5-5, 3.76 ERA) has posted a 2.30 ERA over his last three starts spanning 15 2/3 innings. He is making his first career appearance against the Rockies.

Rockies: RHP German Marquez (11-9, 4.42 ERA) is set to make his third career start against the Cardinals but first in more than a year. He won his previous outings against St. Louis, both at Coors Field, going 2-0 with a 2.53 ERA over a combined 10 2/3 innings.

— Associated Press —

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