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Griffon women’s golf team finishes 6th at Northeastern State; Men tie for 16th at UNK

riggertMissouriWesternTAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Missouri Western Women’s Golf team concluded their second meet of the season with a sixth place finish at the NSU Women’s Golf Classic at Cherokee Springs Golf Course in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.

Shi Qing Ong continued her early success, finishing second with a score of 147.  Ong was just one stroke back from the leader.  Jenna Kosmatka made the most of day two by dropping her score by seven strokes to finish tied for twenty first with 157.  Madison Romjue also saw her score drop from the previous day, finishing inside the top 30 with a 159.  Tiffanie Yabut finished with a 162 and Brittany Kennedy with a 217 for the Griffons.

Southwestern Oklahoma State won the event as a team, while Northeastern State’s Baylee Price took individual honors.  Missouri Western travels next to the MIAA Preview on Sept. 26 and Sept. 27 at Mules National Golf Club in Warrensburg, Missouri.

AXTELL, Neb. – Missouri Western Men’s Golf team shot a 619 in the UNK Invite at Awarii Dunes in Axtell, Nebraska.  Weather limited the invitational to only two rounds.

Individually, the Griffons were led by Patrick McCarthy who shot a 148 to finish tied for 20th in his first collegiate meet.   Jakob Rudosky would finish tied for the 31st shooting a 150.  Also appearing in his first college meet was Kevin Kim, who finished with a 157 for the Invitational.   Jake Giles ended his rounds with a score of 164 and Lucas Horseman withdrew after the first round due to injury.

Jay Cottam of Nebraska Kearney won the meet with a 141.  UNK also won the team title behind a score of 583.  Missouri Western will travel to Muskogee, Oklahoma on Sept. 19 and Sept. 20th for the NSU Men’s Golf Classic.

— MWSU Athletics —

Moss, Diaz hit home runs, Cardinals stall Cubs with 4-2 win

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Brandon Moss broke out of a lengthy slump with a tiebreaking home run and Aledmys Diaz connected in his return to the starting lineup, leading the St. Louis Cardinals over the Chicago Cubs 4-2 Tuesday night.

The Cardinals ensured that the runaway Cubs won’t clinch the NL Central at Busch Stadium. Chicago’s magic number is three, and the series in St. Louis wraps up Thursday.

St. Louis remained a half-game behind the New York Mets for the second wild-card spot.

Moss entered the game mired in a 1-for-41 skid. He hit a two-run homer in the sixth off Jason Hammel (14-9).

Dexter Fowler led off the game with a home run against Jaime Garcia.

Alex Reyes (2-1) won with 4 1/3 innings of scoreless relief. Kevin Siegrist got his second save.

Moss singled in the second and scored on Diaz’s 15th homer of the season. Diaz started for the first time since July 31, when the All-Star shortstop broke his thumb.

Garcia, who lasted just 1 2/3 innings, the shortest outing in his 146-start career. Garcia gave up two runs on three hits, including Fowler’s seventh leadoff homer of the season.

Hammel allowed four runs on six hits in 5 2/3 innings. He struck out nine and walked two.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: INF Matt Carpenter was in the starting lineup after leaving Monday’s game with back tightness. … RHP Trevor Rosenthal threw batting practice. He has missed 46 games with shoulder inflammation. … RHP Michael Wacha is expected to be activated off the disabled list tomorrow and could be headed to the bullpen. He has been out since Aug. 9 with shoulder inflammation.

UP NEXT

Cubs LHP Jon Lester (16-4, 2.51) takes on RHP Carlos Martinez (14-7, 3.05) in the final game of the three-game set. Lester has allowed one run or less in each of his last five starts. He is 6-0 with a 1.17 ERA in his previous eight starts. Martinez is 6-3 in 11 day starts this season. He has induced an NL-leading 32 double plays.

— Associated Press —

MWSU tennis rallies past Truman State Tuesday

riggertMissouriWesternKIRKSVILLE, Mo. – The Missouri Western Women’s Tennis team knocked off Truman State 5-4 today in dual play.  It is the first dual win for the Griffons on the 2016-17 season.

Missouri Western opened up with an 8-2 doubles victory from Karolina Strom and Joanna Abreu Roman.  The Griffons would go on to drop the next to doubles matches 8-3 and 8-6, trailing 2-1 for the match.

The Griffons would use the singles matches to storm back and claim the match 5-4, after falling behind early to Truman State 4-2 . Missouri Western picked straight set victories in number one singles from Karolina Strom, 6-3, 6-4, number two singles Sofia Aguilera, 7-5, 7-5 and number four singles Federica Salmaso, 6-1, 6-1. After dropping the first set 7-6, Joanna Abreu Roman fought back to win the set 6-1, 6-2.  Strom’s win at number one single clinched the comeback for the Griffons.

Missouri Western travels to Quincy, Illinois on Sept. 22 for a dual against Quincy University, starting at 3:30 p.m.

— MWSU Athletics —

Royals get trounced by Oakland in series opener 16-3

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Oakland Athletics looked like a team battling for a playoff spot Monday night, and the Kansas City Royals looked like a team checked out and ready for the offseason.

It was supposed to be the other way around.

Khris Davis and Marcus Semien hit three-run homers, the lowly Athletics matched a season high with 17 hits while drawing 10 walks, and they trounced the Royals 16-3 in their series opener.

“It’s great to have a game like that,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said. “For a team that struggles to score runs, it’s nice to have a positive mood in the dugout.”

In the opposite dugout, the reigning World Series champions could only rue another game slipping away. The Royals (74-69) began the day four back of the final wild-card spot with 20 games to go, and hoped an eight-game stand against Oakland and the White Sox would allow them to gain ground.

But with five teams standing in their way, time is running out.

“These games are easy to turn the page, a lot tougher is losing a one-run game,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “We just got beat. We didn’t play good, we didn’t pitch good and we got beat.”

Daniel Coulombe (3-1) earned the win in relief of Ross Detwiler, though it was the Oakland offense that led the way. The A’s scored their most runs this season for their largest margin of victory.

Royals starter Dillon Gee (6-8) was battered for five runs on five hits and four walks in 3 1/3 innings, though he wasn’t the only pitcher to melt down. He was followed by three relievers in a span of four batters in the fourth inning, when the A’s marched nine to the plate and scored three times.

“When you’re out there trying to find something in a big league game against big league hitters, it makes it real tough,” Gee said. “They scored a lot of runs, but it’s just one game.”

By the end, everybody in the A’s starting lineup had a hit. Stephen Vogt was 3 for 3 with two walks and two RBI, while Joey Wendle, Arismendy Alcantara and Ryon Healy drove also drove in two apiece.

“We were swinging at a lot of good pitches,” said the A’s Brett Eibner, who began the season with Kansas City. “We swung at pitches we want to hit and when you do that, the runs seem to pile up.”

Davis delivered the first big blow in the third inning when he splashed his 36th homer into the fountains in left field, a shot estimated at 447 feet.

When the Royals matched him with three runs in the bottom half, the A’s bounced right back to score three more: Bruce Maxwell and Eibner opened the fourth with back-to-back singles, Wendle hit a sacrifice fly, and the A’s churned out four hits and two walks in taking a 6-3 lead.

It was 8-3 when Semien went deep in the sixth, and Oakland merely piled on from there.

“There’s not much to say,” Yost said. “Just one of those nights.”

BIG LEAGUE DEBUTS

Royals OF Hunter Dozier and A’s INF Renato Nunez and OF/INF Matt Olson made their major league debuts. Nunez and Olson were brought up from Triple-A Nashville prior to the game, with Olson taking the spot of departed DH Billy Butler on the 40-man roster.

“In Olson’s case his parents were here,” Melvin said, “so it was nice to get him in the game.”

SALVY’S BABY BOY

Royals C Salvador Perez was scratched from the starting lineup after his fiance gave birth to a boy on Monday. His name is Johan Salvador and the Royals said mother and baby are doing well.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals RHP Kris Medlen (right rotator cuff inflammation) will not return this season, manager Ned Yost said. LHP Jason Vargas (Tommy John surgery) is also unlikely to pitch for Kansas City this season after making three rehab outings for Triple-A Omaha.

UP NEXT

RHP Jharel Cotton makes his second career start for the A’s after beating the Angels in his debut last week. LHP Danny Duffy goes for his eighth win since the All-Star break for Kansas City.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis gets one-hit, loses to Chicago 4-1

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Kyle Hendricks was so good Monday night he even surprised himself.

The right-hander took a no-hitter into the ninth inning before giving up Jeremy Hazelbaker’s leadoff home run, and the Chicago Cubs beat the St. Louis Cardinals 4-1 to close in on the NL Central crown.

“I never thought I’d get that close to one,” Hendricks said. “A guy who throws to contact and doesn’t throw hard, you don’t think about it. You can run into one of those special days and you think, why not?

“My pregame bullpen was probably the worst I’ve had all year. Hopefully it clicks once the game starts, and it did.”

All the way until the ninth inning.

Hazelbaker drove an 0-2 pitch into the right-field stands for his 12th homer before Hendricks (15-7), the major league ERA leader at 2.03, was relieved by Aroldis Chapman.

“If you’re going to give it up, at least it’s that way and not a cheap hit,” Hendricks said. “I just left the ball up and he got it. It was just a changeup and I wanted to throw it in the dirt and get him to chase.”

Hazelbaker was looking for a changeup.

“I wasn’t surprised by it,” he said. “He’d been throwing that pitch all night. It was a good pitch he threw me. I was able to handle it like I wanted to.”

Ben Zobrist and Dexter Fowler homered for the Cubs, who lowered their magic number to three for clinching the division crown. They lead the second-place Cardinals by 17 games and can wrap up the NL Central with a three-game sweep in St. Louis.

The Cardinals remained a half-game behind the Mets for the league’s second wild card. New York lost 8-1 at Washington.

Soon after Hazelbaker’s shot cleared the fence, teammates went to the mound to talk to Hendricks — leading to an animated argument between Cubs manager Joe Maddon and plate umpire Joe West.

Maddon was ejected for the third time this season, and Chapman entered to finish the one-hitter. He got three outs for his 14th save with Chicago, and is 34 for 37 overall this year with the Cubs and Yankees.

After the pitching change, Maddon argued some more with West before leaving.

“It was a misinterpretation there,” Maddon said. “We needed more time there. I needed the catcher to go to the mound. We were denied. I made my stand.

“I truly believe I was proper in that, but this is not about that. This is Kyle’s night.”

Hendricks, who threw 96 pitches, struck out seven and walked two.

“Pretty special night all around,” he said. “It was fun, man.”

It was the fourth no-hit bid broken up in the ninth inning this season. Cubs teammate Jake Arrieta tossed the lone no-hitter in the majors this year, winning 16-0 at Cincinnati on April 21.

Hendricks got some help from his defense, especially in the sixth.

Cubs shortstop Addison Russell, deep in the hole, went to his knees on the outfield grass for a sliding stop of Jhonny Peralta’s sharp grounder and made a strong throw to first.

Right fielder Jason Heyward then reached into the stands to catch Hazelbaker’s foul fly, practically wrestling with a fan in a Cardinals jersey for the ball.

“He was unbelievably great,” Maddon said about Hendricks. “Unfortunately, he didn’t get the no-hitter. They didn’t have good swings against him all night. He was in charge the entire game. It was a spectacular performance. Kyle was the star.”

Hendricks’ control made him tough to hit, Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said.

“He was pushing the corners all day long and he’s been doing that most of the season and didn’t give us a whole lot,” Matheny said.

Mike Leake (9-10) pitched six innings before being lifted for a pinch hitter. Leake, making his second start since a stint on the disabled list due to shingles, allowed six hits and four runs (three earned).

Anthony Rizzo had an RBI single for the Cubs.

The last time the Cubs won a division title was 2008. They did it by beating St. Louis on Sept. 20 at Wrigley Field.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: RHP Michael Wacha (right shoulder) threw batting practice to Brayan Pena, Jose Martinez and Alberto Rosario. Wacha said he hopes to come off the disabled list Wednesday. … LF Matt Holliday took batting practice on the field for the first time since breaking his right thumb Aug. 11 against the Cubs. … Cardinals closer Seung Hwan Oh, who has 17 saves and a 1.87 ERA, was unavailable Saturday and Sunday against Milwaukee because of a sore groin. Speaking through translator Eugene Koo, the reliever said he would not be available Monday but should be Tuesday.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: LHP Jaime Garcia (10-12, 4.58 ERA) makes his 29th start of the season Tuesday night, his most since 2011 when he made 32. He has started seven games against the Cubs and is 3-2 with a 2.27 ERA.

Cubs: RHP Jason Hammel (14-8, 3.50) allowed nine runs — eight earned — and a career-high 13 hits over 5 2/3 innings in a 12-5 loss at Milwaukee last time out. He is 4-4 with a 4.80 ERA in 10 starts against the Cardinals.

— Associated Press —

Mizzou’s Johnson named SEC Freshman of the Week

riggertMissouriCOLUMBIA, Mo. – Mizzou Football redshirt freshman Johnathon Johnson (Memphis, Tenn.) has been named SEC Freshman of the Week following an electrifying performance last Saturday in a 61-21 win over Eastern Michigan, the league announced Monday. Johnson finished with 210 all-purpose yards with a pair of touchdowns and became the first Football Bowl Subdivision player with a punt return touchdown, receiving touchdown and 100 receiving yards in an FBS game since 2001, according to data from Sports-Reference.com.

Johnson took a punt to the house for a 54-yard score in the second quarter, marking Mizzou’s first punt return touchdown since Marcus Murphy in 2014 at Florida (Oct. 18). It was Mizzou’s first special teams touchdown since Aarion Penton returned a blocked punt for a score in Mizzou’s season opener against SEMO last season.

While the punt return was an exciting play, it was not the most electric play made by Johnson on the night. In fact, on Mizzou’s seventh drive, Johnson took a screen pass from Lock and blazed 87 yards to a touchdown, the middle of a three-TD flurry for Mizzou that spanned just 1:19 of game time to close a 19-point second quarter. The 87-yard strike was Mizzou’s longest passing play from scrimmage since L’Damian Washington scored a 96-yard TD against South Carolina in 2013.

Johnson’s 210 all-purpose yards last Saturday were just 17 shy of cracking the all-time top-25 at Mizzou.

Mizzou Football returns to The Zou this Saturday (Sept. 17) to face No. 13/16 Georgia at 6:30 p.m. on ESPN 1550 AM.

— Mizzou Athletics —

MIAA hands out weekly football honors

riggertMIAAKansas City, Mo. – Northeastern State’s Dimonic McKinzy has been named the MIAA Football Offensive Athlete of the Week with Pittsburg State’s Spencer Brown being named the Defensive Athlete of the Week. Central Missouri kicker Billy Greco has been named the MIAA Special Teams Athlete of the Week.

MIAA Football Offensive Athlete of the Week
Dimonic McKinzy, QB, Northeastern State

McKinzy became the only quarterback in the MIAA with more than three touchdown passes in a game this season when his five TD throws led NSU to a thrilling 35-31 come-from-behind victory over Lindenwood. The sophomore was 23-for-47 passing for 300 yards, five touchdowns and zero interceptions. He also led the RiverHawks in rushing with 38 yards on 10 carries. Northeastern State trailed 31-21 with 5:30 left in the game, but McKinzy led the RiverHawks on two late TD drives that amassed 181 yards in just 3:09. The final game-winning drive went 98 yards in just 1:38 and was capped by a 17-yard TD pass to Gary McKnight with just 33 seconds remaining on the clock. The 6-0 sophomore quarterback is a native of Kansas City, Mo. where he competed at Wyandotte High School prior to playing one season at Hutchinson Community College.

MIAA Football Defensive Athlete of the Week
Spencer Brown, LB, Pittsburg State

Brown tipped and intercepted a pass that he returned 25 yards for the game-clinching touchdown with 1:30 to play in the game as Pitt State scored a 45-31 road win over Central Oklahoma Thursday (Sept. 8). The Gorillas led 37-31 when Brown made his clinching play. The Lees Summit, Mo., native made a game-high nine tackles including key stops in the fourth quarter as Pitt State limited UCO to 50 total yards in the final period to allow the Gorillas to finally overtake the Bronchos. Pitt State forced UCO into three turnovers in the contest. The 6-0 senior linebacker is a native of Lee’s Summit, Mo. where he competed at Lee’s Summit West High School.
Missouri Western.

MIAA Football Special Teams Athlete of the Week
Billy Greco, K, Central Missouri

Greco went 4-for-4 in PAT attempts and connected on both of his field goal attempts as the Mules beat Fort Hays State 34-17. The Papillion, Neb. native had field goals of 23 and 26 yards. He now has 19 made field goals in his career, moving him in to a tie for eighth most in a career at UCM. He also moved in to eighth place all-time at UCM in scoring for a kicker with 108 points. The 5-10 sophomore kicker is a native of Papillion, Neb. where he competed at Papillion-La Vista South High School.

— MIAA Press Release —

Nebraska’s Gerry named Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week

riggertNebraskaNebraska senior safety Nathan Gerry was honored for his performance against Wyoming, as he was named Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week Monday morning.

Gerry’s return sparked the Blackshirts to six turnovers against the Cowboys in Nebraska’s 52-17 win. The senior from Sioux Falls, S.D., finished with a pair of interceptions, a team-high seven tackles, including a TFL, and a pass breakup. The six turnovers forced by the Blackshirts – all coming in the second half – led directly to 28 Husker points, and marked the most turnovers forced by the Huskers since the 2010 season.

With his two interceptions – the first multi-interception game of his career – he moved into the top-five of NU’s career interceptions list, while he also became the fifth defensive back in program history to record 200 career tackles.

Monday marked the first time that Gerry, a two-time All-Big Ten selection, has won the conference’s weekly honor.

The Huskers return to action on Saturday, as they host No. 22 Oregon in the 350th consecutive sellout at Memorial Stadium. Kickoff for the ABC nationally televised broadcast is set for 2:30 p.m. (central).

— NU Athletics —

Chiefs overcome 21-point deficit, beat Chargers 33-27 in OT

riggertChiefsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Alex Smith squirmed out of the pile in the end zone, got to his feet and let out a roar.

All it took was the largest comeback in the 56-year history of the Kansas City Chiefs for the stoic quarterback with the California cool to finally let some emotion show.

Smith threw for 363 yards and two touchdowns to rally his team from a three-touchdown hole, then scored on third-and-goal on the first possession of overtime for a heart-stopping 33-27 victory over the San Diego Chargers in their season opener Sunday.

“Lot of emotion at the end of the game,” Smith said with a smile.

The Chiefs trailed 24-3 in the second half before mounting their charge, and it really kicked into gear when Smith hit Jeremy Maclin with a back-shoulder fade to get within 27-17 with 9 minutes to go.

Cairo Santos added a 33-yard field goal a few minutes later. Then, after forcing a three-and-out, Spencer Ware finished a four-play drive with a touchdown plunge to knot the game at 27.

It took Kansas City 10 plays to march 75 yards in overtime. Smith finished it with his plunge from the 2-yard line, keeping the ball rather than pitch when the smallest of creases opened.

By the time Smith reached his feet, the Chiefs had flooded onto the field to celebrate.

“You’re going to have games like this that show your character, show your grit,” coach Andy Reid said. “I’m proud of the way they handled it. They had confidence in each other.”

Philip Rivers threw for 243 yards and a touchdown, and Melvin Gordon scored the first two TDs of his career. But the Chargers were unable to keep any drives going in the fourth quarter, when the Chiefs were charging to their NFL-leading 11th consecutive regular-season victory.

“You just can’t let them back in. We’ve got to close it,” Chargers offensive tackle Joe Barksdale said. “Everybody with eyes who saw the game has got to know, we have to close it. It’s not acceptable to be up by 24-3 and lose the game. We know that.”

The collapse came after San Diego wide receiver Keenan Allen left in the second quarter with what appeared to be a serious knee injury. He already had six catches for 63 yards.

Even without Allen, the retooled Chargers and their improved offensive line managed to build a 21-3 halftime lead. And it looked as if their eight-game skid against AFC West rivals would finally end.

That all changed once the fourth quarter began.

Josh Lambo missed a 54-yard field goal with San Diego leading 27-10, and the momentum swung toward Kansas City. Smith calmly completed six passes and marched his team 56 yards to the end zone, Santos hit his field goal and Ware his touchdown run, and the game was headed to overtime.

The Chiefs carried their newfound momentum all the way to the finish.

BLACK POWER

Chiefs cornerback Marcus Peters held a black-gloved fist aloft during the national anthem in a salute reminiscent of Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics. It was his way of standing beside 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick’s stance on social injustice.

“I’m supporting Colin and what he’s doing, as far as raising awareness with the justice system,” said Peters, who grew up in Oakland, California. “Coach said it was OK if I wanted to express my thoughts about what I wanted to do, so I just expressed it.”

Peters did link his left arm with his teammates as country singer Trace Adkins performed the anthem. The Chiefs said in a statement they decided to lock arms in a show of solidarity.

MISSING NAMES

The Chiefs played without star pass rusher Justin Houston , who could be out until November as he recovers from ACL surgery in February. The Chargers were without defensive end Joey Bosa, the third pick in April’s draft, who remained on the exempt list after a lengthy holdout.

RUNNING IT: Ware finished with 70 yards rushing and had seven catches for 129 yards, giving the Chiefs a big boost without Jamaal Charles. The four-time Pro Bowl running back is still recovering from surgery last season to repair his ACL and was inactive Sunday.

INJURY REPORT

Allen missed the final eight games last season with a lacerated kidney , and now could be out the rest of this season. He never put weight on his right knee after going down Sunday.

“There is speculation about an ACL,” coach Mike McCoy said, “but we’ll run tests when we get back home.”

Chiefs linebacker Sam Barrington left in the second half with a hamstring injury.

— Associated Press —

Royals combine to two-hit White Sox in 2-0 victory Sunday

riggertRoyalsCHICAGO (AP) — Ian Kennedy wanted to talk about Chris Sale’s outing more than his own performance.

“What did he go, eight innings, 12 punchouts?” Kennedy said. “You know you’re going up against one of the best pitchers in the American League. I just wanted to go out there and try to give our team a chance.”

Kennedy did a lot better than that, combining with three relievers on a two-hitter and helping the Kansas City Royals edge Sale and the Chicago White Sox 2-0 on Sunday.

The key for Kansas City was swinging early. Kendrys Morales homered on Sale’s first pitch of the second and Eric Hosmer did the same in the fourth.

“Honestly, I just try to get out of that box as quick as I can without getting embarrassed,” Hosmer said.

The Royals won their second straight to stay four games behind Baltimore for the final AL wild-card spot. They have to jump five teams over the final 20 games to reach the playoffs for the third straight year.

“We needed this,” Hosmer said.

Kennedy (11-9) walked four, but Adam Eaton’s leadoff single was the only hit off the right-hander in six innings. He improved to 5-0 in his last six starts.

Peter Moylan and Kelvin Herrera each threw a perfect inning before Wade Davis worked around Eaton’s single and a walk in the ninth for his 24th save.

Sale (15-8) struck out 12 in eight innings while becoming the first White Sox pitcher with four consecutive 200-strikeout seasons. It was his third game of 10 or more strikeouts this season and No. 34 for his career.

Sale also went over 200 innings for the second straight season.

“I think more than anything, it’s the innings,” Sale said. “I was told very early on when I got here 200 innings was the benchmark for a starting pitcher.”

But Sale, who has gone at least eight innings in five straight starts, has just one win since starting for the AL in the All-Star Game. It has fueled speculation Sale could be traded in the offseason to help a rare rebuilding project for the struggling franchise.

“I don’t worry about that stuff. It’ll shake out on its own,” Sale said. “I wear this uniform with a lot of pride and I hope I can continue to do that.”

Kennedy, who struck out six, stymied Chicago despite occasional control issues amid his late-season turnaround.

He walked the bases loaded in the third with two out before Melky Cabrera flied to right. Kennedy worked around another walk in the fifth when Tyler Saladino lined to the mound to start a double play.

Davis got Jose Abreu to line to right and struck out Justin Morneau with two on to close the Royals’ fourth win in six games.

“It’s hard to bunch offense against Chris Sale,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “You have to hope you can get a pitch and not miss it. That’s what Mo did. That’s what Hos did and you just hope that your pitching matches.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Yost said OF Lorenzo Cain (sprained left wrist) will see a specialist and they’ll decide in a week if he’ll be shut down for the season. “We’re just doing everything we can right now,” Cain said. “Hopefully, I can get back on the field.” … C Salvador Perez started a second straight game in his return from a wrist injury. “Salvy is a different scenario, it’s just a bone contusion,” Yost said.

White Sox: Sale stayed in after taking a liner off his knee in the third. He recovered to throw out Paulo Orlando at first.

MEMORIES

The 15-year anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks hit home for both managers. Chicago’s Robin Ventura was playing for the Mets and Yost was with the Braves then. The teams faced off in the first game in New York after the attack.

Both men brought up the significance of Mike Piazza’s game-winning home run.

“People could cheer, people could hug each other and laugh and root for their team again,” Ventura said.

UP NEXT

Royals: Oakland comes to Kansas City for four games, with Royals RHP Dillon Gee (6-7, 4.34 ERA) facing LHP Ross Detwiler (1-3, 5.15 ERA) on Monday.

White Sox: AL Central-leading Cleveland visits for four games starting Monday, with RHP Miguel Gonzalez (3-6, 3.81 ERA) facing RHP Carlos Carrasco (11-7, 3.15 ERA).

— Associated Press —

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