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Junis impressive as Royals beat Tigers 1-0 for first win

DETROIT (AP) — With another postponement looming as a possibility, Jakob Junis and the Kansas City Royals breezed to their first victory of the season.

Junis took a shutout into the eighth inning, and the Royals beat the Detroit Tigers 1-0 on Tuesday. On a chilly, rainy day — with snow a possibility on Wednesday — Kansas City and Detroit played nine innings in 2 hours, 17 minutes.

The Royals were the last team in the American League to earn their first win. They already had one game called off because of the weather, on Sunday at home against the White Sox. This one had the potential to be dicey, but although some light rain had fans leaving the lower bowl of seats in the third inning, there were no delays.

“At the beginning, the wind was blowing right in my face, but that kind of helped me out a little bit, to get some more movement on my pitches,” Junis said. “Later in the game it still wasn’t great, but at least the wind had died down a little bit. I pitched in a lot of that type of stuff back in high school, being from Illinois.”

The temperature at game time was 40 degrees.

“Those conditions out there are miserable for everybody,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “When it’s misty like that it helps you a little bit, because you get a little bit of moisture on your fingers. When it’s super ice cold, the ball feels like you’re throwing an ice cube.”

Jorge Soler, who still doesn’t have a major league hit since July 2, drove in the game’s only run with a sacrifice fly in the second.

Junis (1-0) allowed three hits in seven-plus innings . The 25-year-old right-hander walked one and struck out six before being lifted following Mikie Mahtook’s leadoff single in the eighth.

Justin Grimm finished the inning, and Kelvin Herrera struck out two in a perfect ninth for his first save.

Matthew Boyd (0-1) was sharp for the Tigers, allowing a run and four hits in six innings. A native of Mercer Island, Washington, Boyd said he, too, has some experience with conditions like this.

“I think I had an advantage, because I grew up pitching in weather like this,” he said. “In my opinion, it is much easier to pitch in this weather than to hit in it.”

The only run came after Cheslor Cuthbert led off the second and let go of the bat while swinging. The result was a flare that dropped over first baseman Miguel Cabrera and bounced down the line. By the time Cabrera retrieved the ball, Cuthbert had a double. He went to third on a flyout and scored on Soler’s flyball.

Soler went 0 for 2 and is hitless in his last 31 at-bats in the majors.

Cabrera struck out with two on in the third, and the Tigers missed a scoring chance in the fourth when James McCann hit what looked at first like a clean line drive up the middle. Second baseman Whit Merrifield was shifted over, however, and made the diving catch — then doubled Nicholas Castellanos off first .

SMOOTH

Detroit SS Jose Iglesias made a diving stop on Cuthbert’s grounder in the ninth, the start of a nifty 6-4-3 double play that helped the Tigers stay within a run.

“That’s a great play, especially in this weather,” manager Ron Gardenhire said. “It’s wet, so the ball is skipping on you, and then you’ve got to make a toss without a dry grip.”

ZIMMER’S STATUS

The Royals requested unconditional release waivers on RHP Kyle Zimmer, who was designated for assignment March 29.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: 1B Lucas Duda sat out after leaving Monday’s game with right hamstring tightness.

Tigers: Gardenhire said RHP Mike Fiers (lumbar strain) felt good after throwing around 80 pitches Monday at the team’s spring training facility in Florida.

UP NEXT

Detroit’s Daniel Norris faces Kansas City’s Danny Duffy (0-1) on Wednesday, weather permitting.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis blows 4-0 lead, loses at Milwaukee

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Christian Yelich and Ryan Braun hit consecutive homers off Dominic Leone with two out in the ninth, sending the Milwaukee Brewers to a 5-4 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Tuesday night.

Leone (0-1) retired the first two batters, but then lost Yelich on a 2-2 pitch before Braun whacked the next one for his fourth career game-ending homer.

Dan Jennings (1-0) picked up the victory with a perfect ninth.

Dexter Fowler and Tommy Pham opened the game with consecutive homers for St. Louis, and Marcell Ozuna made it 4-0 with a two-run shot in the third. Jack Flaherty struck out a career-high nine while pitching five innings of one-run ball, but the Cardinals’ bullpen lost the lead.

Yelich started Milwaukee’s rally with a two-out RBI single off the glove of shortstop Paul DeJong in the fifth. The Brewers pulled within one on RBI singles for Travis Shaw and Jonathan Villar in the eighth.

Fowler, mired in a 1-for-18 stretch, drove the first pitch from Chase Anderson into the Cardinals’ bullpen for his 24th career leadoff home run. Pham looked at one pitch and then lined the next one over the wall in deep right-center.

Flaherty kept the Brewers guessing with a two-seam and four-seam fastball and a nasty slider in his sixth career start in seventh appearances. He was recalled March 28 from Triple-A Memphis when Adam Wainwright was placed in the disabled list.

Anderson was charged with four runs and eight hits in four innings.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Carlos Martinez (0-1, 8.31 ERA) makes his second start of the season. He is 5-4 with a 2.18 ERA in 23 career games against the Brewers, including 12 starts.

Brewers: RHP Jhoulys Chacin (0-0, 10.80 ERA) makes his second start of the season. A free-agent signee, he is 0-5 with a 6.10 ERA in six career games against the Cardinals.

— Associated Press —

MWSU’s Ong tied for first after day one at Henderson State Invite

MOUNTAIN HOME, Ark. – Missouri Western junior Shi Qing Ong is tied for the lead after day one of the Henderson State Southern Bancorp Invitational in Mountain Home, Arkansas. Ong shot a 1-under-par 71 and she helped the Griffons to a 316 as they’re fifth after the first round.

Chong Yong shot an 80 for the opening round to finish inside the top-30. Jenna Kosmatka recorded an 82 to close out the first day. Katie Irvin and Tiffanie Yabut both carded an 83 in the round.

Taylor Loeb of Henderson State shares the lead with Ong. HSU and Texas A&M-Commerce sit a top of the team leaderboard with a 303. Missouri Western begins its final round Tuesday at 8:30 a.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

Royals stay winless as they drop series opener at Detroit

DETROIT (AP) — Ron Gardenhire’s first win with the Detroit Tigers came courtesy of a couple other grizzled veterans.

Francisco Liriano pitched into the seventh inning in his Detroit debut and Victor Martinez drove in three runs to give the Tigers a 6-1 victory over the Kansas City Royals on a chilly Monday.

Gardenhire won 1,068 games as Minnesota’s manager from 2002-14. This is his first year at the helm in Detroit.

“I know what this city’s all about, I know what this team’s all about, so I’m very proud to be a part of it,” Gardenhire said. “Now I’m in their history books. I got one win.”

The temperature was in the mid-30s at Comerica Park for a matchup between the last two winless teams in the American League. Some fans came dressed in Michigan winter gear — the Wolverines played Villanova hours later in the NCAA men’s basketball championship game.

Liriano (1-0) allowed a run and four hits in 6 2/3 innings. The 34-year-old lefty, signed as a free agent in February, struck out three and walked two while throwing 94 pitches.

The Tigers scored four runs in the fifth, with Martinez delivering a two-run single off Jason Hammel (0-1).

“The third time through the order, they started finding holes,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “We had them played right and he was making decent pitches, but it didn’t work out.”

Kansas City took a 1-0 lead in the third on a sacrifice fly by Drew Butera, but Detroit tied it in the bottom half on an RBI single by Miguel Cabrera.

The Tigers broke open the game in the fifth. With one out, Leonys Martin singled and Jeimer Candelario doubled. After an intentional walk to Cabrera loaded the bases, Nicholas Castellanos hit a soft line drive to left for a run-scoring single.

Then Martinez added his two-run single , and James McCann’s grounder brought Castellanos home and made it 5-1.

Martinez added a sacrifice fly in the seventh.

Hammel allowed five runs and seven hits in five innings. He had the second-lowest run support among qualifying AL pitchers last season, and this game was more of the same.

“This was a maddening game,” Hammel said. “We had a good game plan, we executed it and I felt great out there, but we come out of it with a loss. It’s frustrating.”

Detroit lost its season opener Friday after the Tigers had the winning run taken away by a replay review against Pittsburgh. On Monday, they initially appeared to have turned a game-ending double play, but that was also overturned by a review. Detroit was nonetheless able to close out the victory without incident.

BATTLING THE ELEMENTS

The temperature at game time was 36 degrees, but Liriano didn’t seem too bothered.

“I missed a couple pitches because of that. Was hard for me to get a good grip on the ball, and kind of slippery,” Liriano said. “You have to find a way to stay warm and have some good grip on the ball.”

QUIET OFFENSE

Kansas City managed only five hits on the day. Designated hitter Jorge Soler went 0 for 3 and is now hitless in his last 29 at-bats in the majors. His most recent big league hit came July 2.

ROYALS ROSTER

The Royals claimed outfielder Abraham Almonte off waivers from Cleveland. The 28-year-old hit .233 with three homers and 14 RBI in 69 games last season. The switch-hitter, who has also played for Seattle and San Diego, was sent to Triple-A Omaha. Kansas City designated right-handed pitcher Miguel Almonte for assignment.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: 1B Lucas Duda left the game in the seventh with right hamstring tightness.

Tigers: OF Victor Reyes, who left Sunday night’s game against Pittsburgh with a lacerated forearm, did not play Monday.

UP NEXT

Detroit LHP Matthew Boyd (6-11, 5.27 ERA last year) takes the mound Tuesday against Royals RHP Jakob Junis (9-3, 4.30). Boyd went 4-0 with a 3.42 ERA in spring training.

— Associated Press —

Former Griffon Reichard named to 2018 MIAA Hall of Fame class

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Missouri Western Athletics Hall of Fame member Becky Reichard was announced as part of the 2018 MIAA Hall of Fame Class.

Reichard, who also participated in women’s basketball at Missouri S&T before coming to Missouri Western, was inducted into the MWSU Hall of Fame in 2007. In her two seasons at MWSU (1997-99), she led the Griffons in scoring and assists.

She led the team to two second place finishes in the MIAA Conference and two NCAA Tournament appearances. Reichard’s efforts led her to many individual accolades including: First Team All-MIAA Selection (1998, 1999), Daktronics Honorable Mention All-America (1998), Pre Season All-America as selected by Dick Vitale (1999) and NCAA Division II Kodak All-America Team (1999). In route to all of these accomplishments, Reichard finished her career the all-time leading scorer in MIAA Conference history for women’s basketball tallying 2,159 points and currently ranks second.

Reichard was the 1996 MIAA Freshman of the Year at Missouri S&T and earned All-MIAA honors all four years.

The Hall of Fame induction will be held on June 4 at the Truman Forum Auditorium at the Kansas City Public Library – Plaza Branch. Reservations can be made on the MIAA website.

— MWSU Athletics —

Mikolas homers, wins in major league return as Cards beat Brewers

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Miles Mikolas won in his first big league game after a three-year stint in Japan, but left his biggest impression at the plate.

Hitting a home run to help spoil the Milwaukee Brewers’ home opener sure was special for the St. Louis Cardinals right-hander.

Paul DeJong connected for the second straight game, hitting his third homer this season, and Mikolas collected his first big league hit with a two-run homer in the Cardinals’ 8-4 win on Monday.

Mikolas (1-0) gave up a two-run homer to Eric Thames and solo shots to Lorenzo Cain and Manny Pina. But the 29-year-old righty benefited from the Cardinals’ own outburst at hitter-friendly Miller Park.

“I guess I figured if I’m going to give up some home runs, I might as well try to get one back, help my cause a little bit,” Mikolas joked.

It was a memorable return to the majors for Mikolas, and a disappointing opener for the Brewers. They lost for first time after opening the season with a three-game sweep at San Diego.

“Any pitcher home run, pitcher RBI, it always feels tough to come back from that,” manager Craig Counsell said.

Mikolas gave up seven hits and four runs in 5 2/3 innings in his first big league start since Aug. 25, 2014, when he pitched eight innings for the Texas Rangers in a 2-0 win over Seattle.

He played 37 games for San Diego and Texas in 2012-14. He was 4-6 on the mound and 0 for 4 at the plate.

The power started building in Japan, where Mikolas hit two home runs in three seasons.

He’ll savor his fifth-inning drive off Zach Davies (0-1) that broke a 2-all tie for a while.

“I might remember the home run just because that was a highlight of the day,” Mikolas said. “But looking back I’ll probably look at the mistakes I made as a pitcher … and make myself better moving forward.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals 3B Jedd Gyorko left before the bottom of the seventh with a strained right hamstring. … RHP Adam Wainwright (left hamstring strain) shagged fly balls and grounders during batting practice. Wainwright went on the disabled list on March 26 and is eligible to come off Thursday, which is the Cardinals’ home opener against Arizona. Asked how he felt, Wainwright said with a smile, “That’s what everybody wants to know. It’s a secret.”

Manager Mike Matheny didn’t rule out starting Wainwright for the home opener. “We didn’t take anything off the table,” Matheny said. “Just kind of take all the information in. Just see what happens.”

IT’S A HIT

Nothing like self-motivation on social media to get Dexter Fowler going at the plate. The Cardinals outfielder snapped a 0-for-13 slump to start the season with a third-inning single to center.

Before the game, Fowler wrote “I will get a hit ” 13 times in a tweet. After Fowler broke through, the Indians’ Jose Ramirez and the Astros’ Josh Reddick , posted similar tweets. Both players have also opened the year with extended hitless streaks.

Fowler didn’t last long on the bases though. He was thrown out trying to steal second by Pina following his single.

TURNING POINT

DeJong’s two-run shot, highlighted a four-run sixth that gave St. Louis an 8-2 lead.

The Brewers threatened in the bottom of the sixth. After Thames homered, they put runners on the corners, but reliever Bud Norris struck out Orlando Arcia on a 2-2 slider to end the threat.

The Brewers lost their fourth straight home opener.

“I’d like to win one of these opening day games, that’s first … but business goes on tomorrow. You feel like the rest of the season starts for us tomorrow,” Counsell said.

DAVIES’ DAY

Davies allowed eight hits and seven runs — six earned — over 5 1/3 innings in his season debut. The 25-year-old right-hander is coming off a career-best 17-win season in 2017.

“It was just a bad pitch. Ball slipped middle up, and he crushed it,” Davies said about Mikolas’ homer.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Jack Flaherty makes his first start of the season against the team he faced in the 2017 season finale. He allowed four runs on five hits over five innings on Oct. 1, his only career outing against Milwaukee.

Brewers: RHP Chase Anderson starts in his first turn since tossing six shutout innings to begin the 2-1 win in extra innings on opening day in San Diego. He is 2-2 with a 2.72 ERA in nine career starts against the Cardinals.

— Associated Press —

Northwest’s Osborn, Omon to be inducted into MIAA Hall of Fame

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Northwest Missouri State University had two individuals selected to the 2018 MIAA Hall of Fame class, in an announcement by the league office. Former women’s tennis player Yasmine Osborn and former football running back Xavier Omon will both be inducted into the MIAA Hall of Fame on June 4, 2018 in the Truman Forum Auditorium at the KC Public Library in Kansas City, Mo.

Osborn, the Lenexa, Kansas native earned All-American status in 1998 and won the MIAA No. 1 singles championship in 1997 and 1998 before taking second in 1999, when she suffered an injury in the championship match. Posting 27 singles wins and 28 doubles victories as a sophomore in 1997, Osborn was an All-American in 1998 after winning 22 singles matches. The Bearcats advanced to the NCAA Division II tournament in each of the three seasons she played.

Omon, the Beatrice, Nebraska native is currently the MIAA career rushing leader after finishing with 7,073 yards. He leads the MIAA record books for season rush attempts (370 in 2007) and career rush attempts (1,271). Omon also holds the second position for MIAA single season rushing yards with 2,337 in 2007, as well as the all-time scorer with 590 points and the single season scoring mark of 228 points in 2007. He also holds 32 of the Bearcats’ 34 records for rushing and scoring. Omon was a three-time First Team All-MIAA selection, while helping the Bearcats claim two MIAA titles and make three appearances in the national title game.

— Northwest Athletics —

Royals game with White Sox postponed by cold, snow

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The season-opening series finale between the Kansas City Royals and Chicago White Sox was postponed Sunday with snow in the afternoon forecast and temperatures struggling to reach the freezing mark.

The game will be made up as part of a day-night doubleheader on April 28. The makeup game will begin at 1:15 p.m. and the original game will be moved back an hour to 7:15 p.m.

The White Sox won the opener Thursday with a six-homer barrage in a 14-7 rout, then rallied in the eighth inning for a 4-3 victory over their AL Central rivals on Saturday night.

Chicago continues its season-opening road trip Monday night in Toronto, while Kansas City departs for its own six-game road trip beginning Monday in Detroit.

— Associated Press —

Harris’ grand slam lifts No. 22 Mizzou to series win at No. 16 Auburn

AUBURN, Ala. – No. 22 Mizzou Baseball earned its first road series win over a ranked opponent since 2016 with a 5-0 Easter Sunday (April 1) win over No. 16 Auburn at Plainsman Park. Senior OF Trey Harris (Powder Springs, Ga.) hit a go-ahead grand slam, his second of the season, in the top of the fifth inning to back a tremendous start by RS junior Bryce Montes De Oca (Lawrence, Kan.). Mizzou has won two of its three SEC series this season and four of its last five dating back to last season.

Montes De Oca improved to 4-1 on the season after allowing just one hit over 6.0 shutout innings, striking out five and walking four. Auburn starter Tanner Burns took the loss, falling to 2-4 on the year.

Harris drove in five runs, one off a career-high, with four coming on the grand slam, which was Mizzou’s first hit of the game. Mizzou’s pitching staff threw a one-hitter in the win.

Mizzou is now 21-7 and 5-4 in SEC play and is tied for fourth in the league standings through three weeks of action.

TURNING POINT

Mizzou got a fifth-inning rally started as a key error by Auburn 2B Luke Jarvis played a big part in Mizzou breaking a 0-0 tie. Senior 3B Alex Samples (Bridgeport, Texas) and freshman OF Cade Bormet(San Antonio, Texas) drew back-to-back two-out walks to turn the lineup over to the leadoff man Harris. After Harris took a curveball to lead off his at-bat, Auburn starter Tanner Burns threw him a 0-1 fastball and Harris turned on it, sending it over the green monster in left field for the go-ahead grand slam.

It was Mizzou’s first hit of the game and all four runs were unearned as the error set up the big inning. It was Harris’ second grand slam of the season.

QUOTING MIZZOU

Head Coach Steve Bieser:
“Hits were tough to come by early in the game. Both pitchers had great stuff going – they were throwing the ball well. We just had to hang in there and we put all of that together and Trey came up with the big blow and got us into a situation we felt really good about.”

On the series win… 
“I’m really happy with our effort and it is a big series win for us. What we talked about postgame was the reason that we are here in this position is what we have done up to this point. We can’t take anything for granted. We have to continue to work hard and know that each series is its own challenge. We have tough travel back in – we’ll get home late tonight and we have to start next week. We have five games sitting in front of us and it is going to be very challenging. We have to enjoy the moment right now, but we have to get ready to go next week.”

TOP TIGERS

  • Senior OF Trey Harris (Powder Springs, Ga.) hit a go-ahead, two-out grand slam in the top of the fifth inning. It was his second homer of the series and he has now reached base in a career-best 20- consecutive games. It was Harris’ second grand slam of the season and first since Feb. 28 vs. Alabama A&M. Harris drove in five runs Sunday, the second-most he’s had this season (six vs. Alabama A&M).
  • RS junior RHP Bryce Montes De Oca (Lawrence, Kan.) went 6.0 shutout innings and allowed just one hit while striking out five in his fourth win of the season.
  • Junior RHP Nile Ball (Decatur, Ga.) tallied his fourth save of the season, pitching the final 3.0 innings, allowing no hits with a season-high four strikeouts.

NOTES

  • Mizzou now leads the all-time series with Auburn, 12-5, and has won all five three-game series that it has ever played against Auburn.
  • Mizzou improves to 3-3 on Sundays.
  • Mizzou improves to 2-1 in rubber games this season.
  • Mizzou is now 13-5 in three-game series this season.
  • Mizzou improves to 6-4 in road games this season and 8-6 in games away from home.
  • Senior OF Trey Harris walked to lead off the game, extending his career-best streak to 20 consecutive games reaching base safely. When leading off an inning, Harris has reached in 14 of 30 opportunities (.467).
  • Mizzou has now won two of three SEC series this season, marking the first time since 2015 that Mizzou has won two of its first three SEC series.
  • Mizzou has now won four of its last five SEC weekend series dating back to last season.
  • Mizzou earned its first road series win over a ranked team since downing then No. 15 Arkansas from April 1-3, 2016.
  • Mizzou earned its first SEC shutout since May 19, 2017, in a 5-0 win at Tennessee. It was Mizzou’s fifth shutout this season.
  • Sophomore CF Kameron Misner drew his SEC-leading 32nd walk of the season in the seventh inning.
  • Senior C Brett Bond turned in his ninth multi-hit game of the season.
  • Mizzou was the only SEC road team to win a series this weekend.

UP NEXT

Mizzou will be back in action Tuesday, playing in-state foe Missouri State at Busch Stadium, home of Major League Baseball’s St. Louis Cardinals. First pitch for that game is at 6:30 p.m.

— Mizzou Athletics —

DeJong’s hits two HRs as Cardinals defeat the Mets for first win

NEW YORK (AP) — Paul DeJong made the right decision to give up the scalpel, trumpet and piano to concentrate on baseball.

A rising star on the St. Louis Cardinals, the 24-year-old shortstop had the first multihomer game of his young big league career Sunday and helped the St. Louis Cardinals beat the New York Mets 5-1 to avoid an opening three-game sweep.

DeJong hit .285 with 25 home runs and 65 RBI as a rookie last year, earning a $26 million, six-year contract. He had 13 homers at Triple-A Memphis before his major league debut on May 28 — when he homered off Colorado closer Greg Holland on his first big league swing.

“I know that I can consistently hit for power, whether it’s doubles or homers,” DeJong said.

A 2015 graduate of Illinois State who majored in biochemistry and pre-medicine, he was selected by the Cardinals in the fourth round of that year’s amateur draft. During spring training last month, when the Cardinals gave him the big contract, he attended several social events of the Palm Beach Symphony — not a regular nightlife stop of most big leaguers.

“I like all types of music, from Metallica to Chopin,” he said.

His younger brother Matthew is in a master’s program for piano at Florida State.

“He was always more devoted to music than I was,” DeJong said. “I played the piano, as well. Also the trumpet. But I stopped sophomore year in high school for the trumpet and a little earlier than that for the piano.”

DeJong sent a fastball from Steven Matz off the facing of the left-field second deck in the second inning and drove Jacob Rhame’s slider off an orange M&M advertisement just over the left-field wall in the eighth for his second solo homer.

“He’s dangerous,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. “I won’t put a ceiling on him.”

DeJong was 9 for 12 in a series against the Mets just before last year’s All-Star break and is 15 for 41 versus New York with five doubles, six homers and eight RBI overall. He is 3 for 3 with a pair of homers against Matz.

“I had two strikes on him and I left the ball right over the plate,” the lefty said.

Luke Weaver (1-0), a rare starting pitcher with a single-digit uniform number (7), struggled through a 27-pitch first inning in his first outing and gave up Amed Rosario’s tying single in the second. The 24-year-old right-hander, who last summer became the first Cardinals rookie to win seven straight starts since Ted Wilks in 1944, wound up allowing five hits in five innings, four of them singles.

“A grind is like the perfect definition of what it was,” Weaver said.

Marcell Ozuna broke out of an 0-for-9 start with three hits, including an RBI double in the third and a run-scoring single in the fifth.Yadier Molina hit a leadoff homer in the fourth for the Cardinals, outscored 15-6 in the first two games.

After solid starts by Noah Syndergaard and Jacob deGrom, Matz (0-1) tried to put behind an injury-decimated sophomore season in which the lefty slumped to a 2-7 record. He struggled with his control and was up to 51 pitches after two innings and 73 after three. He lasted five innings, giving up three runs and four hits, as the Mets kept up their terrible trend of last year, when they were 16-36 in series finales.

“All three runs I gave up I had two strikes on the guys,” Matz said. “I was leaving the ball up a lot.”

In the Cardinals clubhouse after the game, there was loud, thumping music. DeJong hasn’t grooved to classical music yet for batting practice.

“I’ve thought about it. I just haven’t pulled the trigger. I don’t bring my headphones with me, usually,” he said. “I don’t like to get too far in my head with music. Sometimes that can happen.”

SLUMPING START

Cardinals leadoff hitter Dexter Fowler was 0 for 4 with three strikeouts before walking in the eighth inning and has started the season 0 for 13 with six Ks.

TRADING PLACES

St. Louis obtained OF Johan Mieses from the Los Angeles Dodgers for INF Breyvic Valera, who had been designated for assignment.

HONORING RUSTY

New York will wear a patch on the right sleeves of its jerseys for the rest of the season in honor of former Mets star Rusty Staub, who died Thursday. Sunday would have been his 74th birthday.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Mets: CF Brandon Nimmo was scratched after being up most of the night with flu-like symptoms. … RHP Anthony Swarzak was to be evaluated after leaving Saturday’s game with a sore left oblique. … LHP Jason Vargas (broken right hand) threw a bullpen Saturday and is to throw a simulated game Monday.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Miles Mikolas makes his first big league appearance since Aug. 25, 2014, when he starts Monday at Milwaukee. He spent the past three seasons with the Yomiuri Giants in Japan’s Central League.

Mets: RHP Matt Harvey, coming off a 5-7 season, makes his 2018 debut Monday against visiting Philadelphia and Ben Lively.

— Associated Press —

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