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Northwest volleyball adds Gaby da Silva to 2016 roster

Northwest2013riggertMARYVILLE, Mo. – Northwest Missouri State University head volleyball coach Amy Woerth has announced the addition of Gaby da Silva to the 2016 Bearcat roster. Da Silva, who played her first two seasons at Cloud County Community College, is a native of Igarape, Brazil.

“We’re very excited to welcome Gaby to our squad,” said Woerth. “She brings a lot of playing experience and maturity. Throughout the recruiting process, I was very impressed with her character and we look for her to do big things for the Bearcats in the future.”

In two years for the Thunderbirds, da Silva appeared in 55 matches, registering 436 kills, averaging 2.52 per set. She also tallied 231 digs, 56 blocks and 24 assists. The 5-9 outside hitter finished second on the team in kills as a sophomore in 2015 and was third in digs. Cloud County finished the year with 22 wins, the most in the program’s history since the rally scoring era. The Thunderbirds advanced to the Region VI Playoffs.

Da Silva, who is also fluent in Portuguese, will have two years of eligibility at Northwest.

— Northwest Athletics —

St. Joseph splits doubleheader at Sedalia Thursday

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs split their doubleheader at Sedalia Thursday as they won game one 8-7 in 10 innings and then dropped the nightcap 6-2.

St. Joe’s collegiate summer baseball team is now 16-7 and 12-7 in the MINK League.

Game one Thursday was a continuation of the Mustangs suspended game Monday at Sedalia.  St. Joseph started the day with a 5-1 lead in the top of the third inning and built a 7-1 lead in the fifth.

Sedalia battled back as they scored five runs in the bottom of the fifth inning and then tied the game in the seventh to force extra innings.

Brady Anderson led off the 10th inning with a solo home run and the Mustangs held on for the 8-7 victory.

Louis Mele, Evan McDonald and Clayton Risch had two hits each, while Jake Alu had two RBI.

Steve D’Amico earned the win in relief as he went five innings and allowed one run on two hits.

In game two, the Bombers broke through to snap a scoreless tie with five runs in the fourth inning.  Sedalia led 6-0 when St. Joe finally got on the board with two runs in the seventh.  Jacob Richardson had an RBI single and Kyle Uhrich added a sacrifice fly.

Miles Kilgore suffered the loss as he went seven innings and allowed six runs on eight hits.  Kilgore struck out three and walked three others.

The Mustangs finish their seven-game road trip 4-3 as they return home Friday for a non-league game against the Carroll Merchants.  The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m. inside Phil Welch Stadium and it’ll be broadcast on ESPN 1550.

Missouri Western adds Track & Field and Cross Country; will begin competing in 2017

riggertMissouriWesternST. JOSEPH -The Missouri Western State University Board of Governors has approved the addition of men’s and women’s indoor and outdoor track and field and men’s and women’s cross country to the Griffon Athletics program in time for the 2017-18 academic year.

The additional six teams will bring Missouri Western’s total number of sponsored intercollegiate athletics teams to 16. Missouri Western was one of just two current MIAA member institutions to not sponsor track and field or cross country. Director of Athletics Kurt McGuffin said the timing was right to add teams.

“We felt it was crucial that our current teams were in a position to compete for championships each and every year before we added any additional sports,” McGuffin said. “The recent success of our 10 current teams proved to me we were ready to move forward with adding sports. I also think it’s important to keep the momentum we’ve had athletically, with success on and off the fields as well as facility improvements.”

A coaching search will begin soon with the staff expected to be in place during the fall of 2016. Competition for the teams will begin during the 2017-18 academic year. The teams are expected to bring incremental increases to enrollment at the University with the expected addition of up to 70 student-athletes.

“We’re excited about what track and field and cross country can add for an athletic program, but there is no question this is also a good thing for the University,” McGuffin said. “It takes a significant number of student-athletes to remain competitive in these sports, and those are students who might not have been looking at Missouri Western as an option before the addition of these teams.”

The board also approved additional scholarships for the women’s soccer and baseball programs. The additional scholarships will bring both up to the NCAA Division II maximum (9.9 for women’s soccer, 9 for baseball). The additional scholarships are projected to bring in an additional 15 student-athletes.

— MWSU Athletics —

Mustangs win third straight at Branson

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs completed a three-game sweep against Branson Wednesday at Bolivar, as St. Joe’s collegiate summer baseball team defeated the Nationals 9-5.

The Mustangs improve to 15-6 this season and 11-6 in the MINK League.

St. Joseph built a 4-0 lead after four innings and then broke open a 4-1 game with a four-run seventh.

Mustangs’ first baseman Kyle Uhrich had another big night as he finished 3-for-5 with a home run, three RBI and three runs scored.  Jacob Richardson added three hits, while Richardson, Evan McDonald, Brady Anderson and Clayton Risch had one RBI each.

Jonathan Lynch started the game and threw two scoreless innings, but Jason Blanchard picked up the win as he went six innings of relief.  He allowed four runs on six hits, but he struck out 10 batters.

The Mustangs complete their seven game road trip Thursday in Sedalia.  They’ll complete their suspended game from Monday beginning at 4:00 p.m. and then play the regular scheduled nine-inning game at 7:00 p.m.  Game one will be broadcast on ESPN 1550 and game two will air on 680 KFEQ.

Kansas City loses 4-3 as Mets sweep two-game series

riggertRoyalsNEW YORK (AP) — Even when the Mets win lately, it hurts.

Noah Syndergaard left his start after six innings with a sore elbow and Yoenis Cespedes came out because of an aching wrist, yet New York held off the Kansas City Royals 4-3 Wednesday for a two-game sweep in their World Series rematch.

Both star players were sent to the doctor as the banged-up Mets packed for a seven-game road trip. Lucas Duda, David Wright, Juan Lagares and reliever Jim Henderson already are out with injuries, and Bartolo Colon lasted four pitches in New York’s 2-1 victory Tuesday night before he was hit in the thumb by a line drive.

Fellow pitcher Zack Wheeler recently had a setback in his rehab from Tommy John surgery.

“We’ve got to keep grinding. We’ve got to go with what we’ve got,” second baseman Neil Walker said. “This is no different than what we’ve kind of been going through.”

Matt Reynolds snapped a sixth-inning tie with his first major league home run for the Mets. Asdrubal Cabrera homered for the second straight day and scored with an acrobatic slide to help Syndergaard (8-2) win his sixth consecutive decision.

Cespedes had two hits and a walk, including a double off the center-field wall, but was removed in the sixth because of discomfort in his left wrist.

“If you remember last fall he had a similar problem with that left hand. He takes some swings and it comes off the bat,” manager Terry Collins said. “So I don’t know what the issue is. I’m certainly concerned about it. Anytime, when you’re a hitter and you’re a big hitter and your hands and your wrists have problems, it’s a concern.”

Cespedes was diagnosed with a mild strain in his left wrist. He received a cortisone shot and is day to day, Mets spokesman Jay Horwitz told The Associated Press later Wednesday night.

The news about Syndergaard, an emerging ace in his second big league season and the hardest-throwing starter in the majors, was also a concern. The 23-year-old pitcher had his right elbow examined earlier this year after feeling some tightness, but hasn’t missed a turn in the rotation.

“His elbow flared up on him. That’s why I took him out of the game,” said a terse Collins, nudged by Horwitz to disclose that information at the conclusion of his postgame news conference.

An MRI showed no structural damage and he receive anti-inflammatory medication and was cleared to resume normal activities, Horwitz later said.

Syndergaard pitched on six days’ rest, pushed back a day after throwing 115 pitches — one short of his most in the majors — over a career-high 8 1/3 innings during his previous outing.

Wheeler was diagnosed with sensory nerve irritation in his right elbow. Tests showed no structural damage and he also received a cortisone shot and was cleared resume baseball activities as tolerated

Cheslor Cuthbert homered for the Royals, who had won eight of nine when they arrived at Citi Field — where they clinched their 2015 championship with a late rally in Game 5.

But after a string of comebacks floored the Mets last fall, this time New York’s bullpen held Kansas City at bay in two more tight games between the teams. Including a two-game split at Kauffman Stadium to begin the season, the Mets took three of four meetings between the defending league champions this year.

Reynolds, playing the outfield for the first time in his professional career, hit an opposite-field drive to right off Joakim Soria (3-3) with two outs in the sixth.

“He put it in the air, and the wind took care of the rest,” Soria said.

That put New York ahead 4-3 and made a winner of Syndergaard, who won 2-0 at Kansas City in April. Of course, he also earned New York’s only World Series victory last October and irritated the Royals by firing his first pitch above Alcides Escobar’s head.

The big right-hander squandered a pair of one-run leads this time, giving up three runs and a season-high eight hits. He struck out four and walked none.

Jerry Blevins and Addison Reed set up Jeurys Familia for his major league-leading 24th save.

Curtis Granderson walked with two outs in the fifth and Cabrera hit a two-run shot off a 97 mph, 1-2 fastball from frustrated starter Danny Duffy.

“I made one bad pitch that really kind of screwed up the whole performance,” Duffy said.

Whit Merrifield and Paulo Orlando each had an RBI single for the Royals.

STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND

New York sat slumping LF Michael Conforto against the left-hander, so Reynolds started in left field and made all his plays. The rookie infielder said the last time he played the outfield was one summer ballgame in the Cape Cod League during college.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: All-Star LF Alex Gordon (broken right wrist) played his fourth rehab game at Double-A Northwest Arkansas. He was 4 for 11 with a home run and a double in his first three games and could rejoin the Royals this weekend.

Mets: The 43-year-old Colon remains scheduled to make his next start Sunday in Atlanta. … Needing a fresh arm in their taxed bullpen, the Mets recalled RHP Logan Verrett from Triple-A Las Vegas and optioned INF Ty Kelly to their top farm club.

UP NEXT

Royals: After a day off Thursday, their second in four days, the Royals play another opponent they dispatched during the 2015 postseason. RHP Edinson Volquez (7-6, 4.12 ERA) faces AL Cy Young Award winner Dallas Keuchel (3-9, 5.32) when Houston visits Kansas City on Friday night for a three-game series.

Mets: RHP Matt Harvey (4-9, 4.76 ERA) takes the mound Thursday night in the opener of a four-game set. RHP Matt Wisler (3-7, 4.23) pitches for the last-place Braves, who beat Harvey and swept three games at Citi Field last weekend.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals beat Arrieta, Cubs to complete three-game sweep

riggertCardinalsCHICAGO (AP) — When the St. Louis Cardinals arrived at Wrigley Field for a three-game series, manager Mike Matheny shook off questions about their 12 1/2-game deficit to the surging Cubs by insisting he avoids looking at the standings.

“It’s just not allowing me to fall into the trap, the trap of either being content or being overwhelmed,” Matheny said.

Three games later, Cardinals showed the NL Central may not be sewn up just yet.

Michael Wacha pitched into the seventh inning for his first win in nearly two months and the Cardinals waited out Jake Arrieta before roughing up Chicago’s bullpen in a 7-2 victory over the Cubs on Wednesday.

Aledmys Diaz hit a two-run home run, and Matt Carpenter had a two-run double in a five-run sixth after Arrieta (11-2) departed. The Cardinals won their eighth straight road game — their longest streak since 1982 — and completed their first three-game sweep at Wrigley Field since 1988.

“This is a big series for us,” Carpenter said.

Arrieta was charged with two runs — one earned — and four hits in five innings as he struggled with control (four walks) and pitch count (106).

“Go back to work tomorrow and combat the things that teams have done against me recently,” Arrieta said.

Wacha (3-7) allowed two hits until rookie Willson Contreras’ one-out, two-run homer in the seventh ended his day.

Contreras replaced Miguel Montero an inning earlier after the catcher twisted his right knee. He said after the game he was fine.

The Cubs had three hits and committed several mental and defensive miscues. Their three-game skid matches the longest of the season.

“Give them credit. They pitched well, they really played well and they beat us fair and square,” manager Joe Maddon said.

Chicago entered the series the darlings of baseball. But the Cardinals, who won 100 games last season before falling to the Cubs in the playoffs, showed their mettle.

Wacha set down the first nine batters before giving up two walks in the fourth and then Anthony Rizzo’s opposite-field single against the shift with two out.

But the Cubs didn’t score thanks to Chris Coghlan getting doubled off first base on a fly to left, and Wacha was able to snap a seven-game skid.

“It’s been a while for sure,” Wacha said.

The Cardinals made Arrieta work with long at-bats before taking advantage of Chicago’s shoddy defense.

“We grinded 1 through 9, even Wacha had a pretty long at-bat (seven pitches) against him,” Carpenter said. “We worked his pitch count and had runners on base. The error, that ended up being the difference in the game.”

A single and two walks loaded the bases in the fifth with one out when Stephen Picotty hit a grounder to third. But second baseman Ben Zobrist’s relay throw to first was a one-hopper, Rizzo couldn’t dig it out for the double play, and two runs scored.

“That was a big moment there,” Rizzo said. “I just missed it.”

Justin Grimm replaced Arrieta and was charged with four runs while getting one out in a nightmare sixth for Chicago before Contreras hit his second big league homer.

Rizzo later left the game as a precaution with a tight back.

“If it wasn’t 7-0, I think I would have stayed in the game,” Rizzo said.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: RHP Seth Maness (elbow) allowed a walk and got two outs in his first appearance since being activated off the disabled list Sunday.

Cubs: With CF Dexter Fowler (hamstring) on the disabled list, Maddon has settled in on Coghlan batting leadoff against right-handers and Zobrist vs. lefties.

MOLINA & THE CUBS

Cardinals C Yadier Molina could be starting with an all-Cubs infield at the All-Star Game. The latest NL voting released Wednesday had Molina with a slight lead over San Francisco’s Buster Posey. The Cubs’ Rizzo, Zobrist, Kris Bryant and Addison Russell continued to lead at their infield positions.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: After an off day, RHP Carlos Martinez (7-5, 3.17 ERA) looks to stay unbeaten in June in the opener of a three-game series at Seattle.

Cubs: LHP Jon Lester (9-3, 2.06 ERA) aims to win his sixth straight start Thursday night as Chicago opens a season-high 11-game trip in Miami. Struggling LHP Wei-Yin Chen (4-2, 5.22) will start for the Marlins.

— Associated Press —

St. Joseph sweeps Branson to snap two-game skid

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs snapped their two-game losing streak Tuesday as they swept a doubleheader at Bolivar against the Branson Nationals, 10-1 and 13-6.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team is now 14-6 this season and 10-6 in the MINK League.

In game one, John Millan made his first start of the season the Mustangs and allowed just one run and five hits in six innings of work.

Kyle Uhrich hit two home runs to lead the offense as he drove in four runs.  Brett Marr, Brady Anderson and Tyler Cox added two hits each, while Cox had two RBI as well.

In game two, St. Joseph blew a 5-0 lead as the Nationals came back to tie it in the fourth inning, but the Mustangs pulled away late with single runs in the fifth and sixth and then six runs in the seventh inning.

Orencio Fisher, Jake Alu, Davey Casciola and Evan McDonald had two hits each, while Fisher scored four runs and Clayton Risch added three runs scored.

Logan Campbell earned the win in relief as he threw 2.1 scoreless innings.  Jacob Hurst started and got pulled in the fourth inning as he allowed five runs on five hits.

The Mustangs close out their three-game series against Branson Wednesday as they play the Nationals at 5:00 p.m. in Bolivar.

Royals come up short in World Series rematch at New York

riggertRoyalsNEW YORK (AP) — Bartolo Colon’s early injury put the New York Mets in a major bind, but they won a battle of bullpens against the best relief corps in baseball and defeated the Kansas City Royals 2-1 on Tuesday night in a World Series rematch.

Yoenis Cespedes hit his 18th home run and Asdrubal Cabrera also connected for New York, which had lost three straight and six of eight.

Held to one hit and no other baserunners Sunday as lowly Atlanta capped a sweep at Citi Field, the Mets again had trouble generating offense. This time, however, a gritty Hansel Robles (1-3) and four other relievers bailed them out by combining for 8 2/3 stellar innings in the opener of a two-game set.

The Royals were back at Citi Field for the first time since clinching their World Series title last November with a late rally in Game 5. Still, manager Ned Yost insisted the trip was no sunny stroll down memory lane. The teams split a two-game series in Kansas City to open the regular season.

“Just another series,” Yost said before the game. “I don’t know if it’s weird or not. I mean, it was a great accomplishment, but it’s kind of in the rearview mirror in the middle of the season now.”

Hours earlier, the Mets announced a tweak to their pitching rotation. Colon was bumped up a day to start on regular rest, and Noah Syndergaard was pushed back one day to Wednesday afternoon.

But after only four pitches by the 43-year-old Colon, the defending NL champions were scrambling.

Royals leadoff batter Whit Merrifield hit a line drive that barely glanced off the pitcher’s glove and struck him hard on his right thumb.

The ball deflected to second baseman Neil Walker, who threw to first for an out. In the meantime, Colon shook his pitching hand in obvious pain and bent over at the waist as manager Terry Collins and trainer Ray Ramirez came rushing out of the dugout.

After a brief meeting near the mound, Colon walked off the field. Robles entered and was given all the time he needed to warm up.

X-rays on Colon’s thumb were negative, the Mets said.

Robles took over and provided yeoman’s work. After throwing 41 pitches Sunday, he threw 65 over 3 2/3 effective innings in this one and struck out six. The right-hander’s previous career highs were 52 pitches and three innings, in different games.

Robles finally tired in the fifth and gave up an RBI single to Brett Eibner with nobody out before Erik Goeddel pitched out of a jam. Goeddel tossed two scoreless innings before Jerry Blevins worked a perfect seventh and Addison Reed a 1-2-3 eighth.

Jeurys Familia struck out two in a one-hit ninth for his major league-leading 23rd save. Familia, charged with three blown saves in the World Series last year against the Royals, has converted a club-record 39 consecutive regular-season chances dating to last August — though he did blow a four-run lead in the ninth inning of a game this season.

Cabrera hit an opposite-field drive to left off Ian Kennedy (5-6) in the first, and Cespedes homered to center leading off the fourth.

ON HIS WAY OUT

Kansas City has requested unconditional release waivers on 2B Omar Infante, designated for assignment last week. If he goes unclaimed, the 34-year-old Infante would become a free agent Thursday and could sign with any team.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Three-time All-Star LF Alex Gordon (broken right wrist) could return to the lineup as early as this weekend if he keeps feeling good, Yost said. Gordon was 3 for 6 with a home run and a double in two rehab games with Double-A Northwest Arkansas.

Mets: On a busy day at Citi Field, the Mets activated Travis d’Arnaud from the disabled list. The catcher had been sidelined since April 26 with a strained right rotator cuff. He batted eighth and went 0 for 3 with a long flyout, but passed his first test on defense by throwing out Alcides Escobar trying to steal second base in the first inning. To open a roster spot for d’Arnaud, catcher Kevin Plawecki was optioned to Triple-A Las Vegas. New York also put reliever Jim Henderson on the 15-day DL, retroactive to Sunday, with right biceps tendinitis and recalled LHP Sean Gilmartin from its top farm club.

UP NEXT

Syndergaard (7-2, 1.91 ERA) will start on six days’ rest Wednesday against LHP Danny Duffy (2-1, 3.17). Syndergaard has won five straight decisions. He also won 2-0 in Kansas City when the teams split two games to open the season. And of course, he earned New York’s lone World Series victory last October and rankled the Royals by firing his first pitch above Escobar’s head.

— Associated Press —-

Carpenter, Holliday homer as Cardinals beat Cubs again

riggertCardinalsCHICAGO (AP) — Matt Carpenter and Matt Holliday homered to back Adam Wainwright, and the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Chicago Cubs 4-3 on Tuesday night.

The Cardinals won their second straight game after going 0-5 on their first winless homestand of at least two series since 1983.

Carpenter and Holliday connected against Jason Hammel (7-3) in a three-run third inning that made it 4-1. Wainwright (6-4) pitched into the seventh and improved to 10-1 in 21 games — 16 starts — at Wrigley Field.

The Cardinals put themselves in position to sweep their first trip to Chicago since last year’s NL Division Series, though it won’t be easy with the major league-leading Cubs sending reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Jake Arrieta to the mound.

Chris Coghlan scored two runs for the Cubs, whose longest losing streak is three games. Chicago hit into three double plays.

Wainwright allowed three runs and six hits in 6 2/3 innings.

Chicago’s Addison Russell doubled off the wall in left leading off the seventh. Jonathan Broxton came in with two outs and walked Coghlan, putting runners on first and third, but first baseman Brandon Moss made a diving stop on Jason Heyward’s grounder to end the threat.

Kevin Siegrist worked the eighth, and Trevor Rosenthal handled the ninth for his 14th save in 16 chances. Shaky in Monday’s win, he gave up a one-out single to Russell and walked Javier Baez with two outs before pinch-hitter Matt Szczur grounded into a force play to end the game.

Hammel went 5 2/3 innings, allowing four runs and six hits.

STRETCH TO START

The Cubs optioned right-hander Adam Warren to Triple-A Iowa to prepare him for a major league start. The Cubs plan to have him start two minor-league games and make one for them before the All-Star break. Warren might make another start after that.

Chicago will have played 24 consecutive days before the break. Stretching Warren will give the starters an extra day of rest.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: C Brayan Pena (left knee surgery) was hitting .179 through 11 minor league games. His rehab stint will expire next week.

Cubs: The Cubs placed LHP Clayton Richard on the 15-day DL because of a blister on his left middle finger.

UP NEXT

The Cubs send Arrieta (11-1, 1.74 ERA) to the mound while the Cardinals go with RHP Michael Wacha (2-7, 4.56) in the finale of the three-game series. Arrieta got the win at St. Louis on May 25 despite allowing a season-high four runs over five innings. Wacha is 0-7 in his last 10 starts.

— Associated Press —

Mustangs lose opener at Sedalia in 10 innings; game two suspended

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs lost the opening game of their doubleheader at Sedalia Monday, 6-5, in 10 innings, and then game two got suspended after two innings due to lightning.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team is now 12-6 and 8-6 in the MINK League after its lost in game one.  The Mustangs led game two 5-1 after two innings and they’re resume that game in the third inning on Thursday when St. Joseph returns to play Sedalia.

In the opener Monday, the Mustangs never trailed in the game until the bottom of the 10th inning.  St. Joe scored single runs in the second, fifth and ninth innings and the Bombers responded in the bottom of each of those innings to tie the game.

It looked like the Mustangs had finally pulled away in the 10th inning as they scored two runs, but Sedalia answered with three runs in the bottom of the 10th inning and pikced up a walk-off win when Jonathan Lynch hit Justin Holt with a pitch with the bases loaded.

St. Joseph’s pitching staff combined to walk nine batters and hit five others.  Logan Jacik started the game and gave up six hits and two runs in five innings of work.  He struck out two and walked two.

Tyler Cox finished 2-for-2 in game one with a home run and two RBI.  Connor Bacon added two hits and Clayton Risch had a pinch hit RBI single.

In the second game, the Mustangs jumped out Sedalia starter Ty Goaff quickly as they scored three runs in the first and two more in the second.  St. Joe had seven hits in the first two innings.

Rain and lightning started early in game two and the umpires suspended the game after two innings and the Mustangs leading 5-1.  St. Joseph is scheduled to play in Sedalia anyway Thursday, so they’ll start the suspended game at 4:00 p.m. Thursday inside Liberty Park Stadium and then play the regularly schedule game at 7:00 p.m.

The Mustangs play a doubleheader Tuesday in Bolivar as they take on Branson. The first pitch of game one is set for 2:00 p.m.

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