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Griffons picked fifth in preseason MIAA volleyball poll

riggertMissouriWesternST. JOSEPH – Coming off a memorable, turnaround season in 2014, the Missouri Western volleyball team has been picked fifth in the MIAA Preseason Coaches’ Poll.

In her second season at the helm, Marian Carbin led the program to its most ever MIAA wins in a season (16) and most overall wins (22) since 1998. This year’s team features two first team All-MIAA selections and an honorable mention All-MIAA pick from 2014. Jessie Thorup finished the year just two kills shy of the team lead behind All-American Erica Rottinghaus. Last year Thorup led the team with a .286 attack percentage and averaged 3.6 kills per set. Jordan Chohon racked up 1,296 assists last year, averaging close to 12 per set. Thorup and Chohon were both named first team All-MIAA. Carbin expects the core of returning players to help set the tone for several newcomers, who will be expected to contribute. Last season, MWSU went 22-8 overall and 16-6 in the MIAA, finishing fifth in the league.

2015 MIAA Preseason Coaches Poll
1. Central Missouri (9) 119
2. Washburn (2) 108
3. Nebraska-Kearney (1)   98
4. Central Oklahoma   95
5. Missouri Western   84
6. Northwest Missouri   66
7. Emporia State   64
8. Fort Hays State   46
9. Pittsburg State   39
10. Southwest Baptist   27
11. Missouri Southern   25
12. Lindenwood   21

— MWSU Athletics —

Lynn gets knocked out in 1st inning as St. Louis falls to Pittsburgh

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Pedro Alvarez homered in a seven-run first inning and the Pittsburgh Pirates broke an eight-game losing streak at Busch Stadium, beating the St. Louis Cardinals 10-5 Thursday night.

The Pirates moved within six games of the first-place Cardinals in the NL Central with their 12th victory in the last 18 games.

St. Louis, which won the first two games in the series, has won the last seven sets between the teams at Busch Stadium.

Alvarez and Neil Walker each three hits as the Pirates held on. The Cardinals closed their seven-run deficit to 7-5 in the seventh.

Francisco Liriano (8-6) pitched six innings and gave up three runs and six hits.

Lance Lynn (9-7) got just two outs in the shortest of his 119 career starts. He gave up six runs, and four of the runs were unearned after a throwing error by third baseman Matt Carpenter.

Walker started the outburst with a triple and Andrew McCutchen doubled. Jung Ho Kang reached on the error and Alvarez followed with his 17th home run of the season, a two-run drive to center.

Liriano and Gregory Polanco added RBI singles that finished Lynn, and Walker capped it by singling home a run.

The Cardinals got a two-run single from Yadier Molina in the bottom half.

Jhonny Peralta cut the deficit to 7-4 with a run-scoring hit in the seventh off reliever Joakim Soria. Molina’s sacrifice fly brought the Cardinals to within 7-5.

Walker hit an RBI double during a three-run ninth.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Pirates: OF Starling Marte did not start and is listed as day-to-day with a left hand contusion. He entered the game as a pinch-runner in the ninth and played the field in the bottom of the inning. Marte injured the hand on a swing in Tuesday’s 4-3 loss. He started Wednesday’s game but was taken out in the third inning.

UP NEXT

Pirates: LHP J.A. Happ (0-1, 8.31) will take on RHP Bartolo Colon (10-11, 4.76) in the first of a three-game series against the Mets in New York on Friday. Happ is making his second start of the season for the Pirates after being acquired from Seattle on July 31.

Cardinals: LHP Jaime Garcia (4-4, 1.77) kicks off a three-game home series against Miami on Friday. He will be opposed by RHP Tom Koehler (8-9. 3.75). Garcia tossed seven shutout innings in a 3-0 win on Saturday at Milwaukee.

— Associated Press —

KC blows 8th inning lead, loses to Detroit 7-4

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Ian Kinsler doubled home two runs and the Detroit Tigers batted around in a four-run eighth inning to beat the Kansas City Royals 7-4 on Wednesday night.

The loss snapped the Royals’ eight-game home winning streak, their longest since winning their first 11 games in 2003 at Kauffman Stadium.

Royals right-hander Edinson Volquez (11-7) had retired 13 straight batters entering the eighth, which James McCann led off with a single. Volquez walked Anthony Gose, and Jose Iglesias had an infield single to load the bases with none out.

Kinsler doubled down the left field line to score McCann and Gose to finish Volquez’s night. J.D. Martinez’s single scored Iglesias. Kinsler scored on Tyler Collins’ fielder’s choice grounder as Detroit sent 10 to the plate in the inning.

Volquez, who had given up three or fewer runs in his previous seven starts, was charged with six runs, five earned, on eight hits over seven-plus innings.

Neftali Feliz (2-3), the former Texas Rangers closer, picked up the victory, retiring all three batters he faced. Bruce Rondon worked the ninth to log his second save in as many chances.

Victor Martinez drove in two of the Tigers runs with a sacrifice fly in the first and a double in the ninth.

Lorenzo Cain had two of the Royals hits, including a double, and scored a run. He is 11 for 19 (.579 average) on this homestand. Four of the Royals’ six hits went for extra bases, including an Alcides Escobar RBI triple in the third. Escobar scored on the play on Iglesias’ throwing error.

Tigers’ rookie left-hander Daniel Norris, who was acquired from Toronto in the David Price trade, permitted four runs on six hits in 6 1-3 innings.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Tigers: 1B Miguel Cabrera (left calf strain) took batting practice, fielded ground balls at first base and ran the bases. If all goes well, Cabrera should come off the disabled list Friday at Houston.

Royals: C Salvador Perez (sore left wrist) had an MRI Wednesday, which manager Ned Yost said came back clean, but Perez was held out Wednesday and likely won’t play Thursday. ”He’s got a little fluid in his joint and a little bit of a bone bruise,” Yost said. . RHP Wade Davis, who has missed the past six games with back stiffness, threw a bullpen session Wednesday and could be available Thursday.

— Associated Press —

Wacha wins 14th, Cardinals beat Pirates 4-2

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) – Yadier Molina has been guiding the St. Louis Cardinals’ pitching staff all season. The All-Star catcher played a big role in this one, helping Michael Wacha get his 14th win.

”Everyone knows about what he does behind the plate,” Wacha said after a 4-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Wednesday night. ”He was all over the place, big knocks, stealing bags – it was a lot of fun to watch.”

Molina tripled in the go-ahead run in the sixth inning when right fielder Gregory Polanco missed an attempted shoe-top catch. He also threw out Polanco attempting to steal from his knees in the first and stole his second base of the season after doubling in the eighth when the Cardinals won an appeal to have the call overturned.

”We love his aggressiveness,” manager Mike Matheny said. ”Yadi’s coming out of the box and he sees what happens and he’s thinking three.

”He’s opportunistic on the bases. He’s got guts.”

As for Polanco, there was a spanking to be absorbed.

”You’d have liked to be able to keep that ball in front of you,” manager Clint Hurdle said. ”At that point in time of game, runner on first in that situation you’re going to be first and second. ”

The anticipated marquee pitching matchup between Wacha (14-4) and Gerrit Cole (14-6) didn’t live up to expectations, as both were gone by the seventh inning. Seattle’s Felix Hernandez also has 14 wins.

”I felt really good out there,” Wacha said. ”I just wanted to keep pumping strikes.”

”The fastball location was sub-par,” Cole said. ”It hasn’t been the easiest few starts.”

St. Louis gave up an easy run, too, when center fielder Randal Grichuk badly misplayed an attempted diving catch on Andrew McCutchen’s RBI triple that tied it at 2 in the fifth. Grichuk landed early and bounced as the ball rolled past him to the wall.
View gallery
Wacha wins 14th, Cardinals beat Pirates 4-2
St. Louis Cardinals’ Yadier Molina gestures toward his bench after hitting an RBI triple during  …

Kevin Siegrist worked two perfect innings and Trevor Rosenthal finished for his 35th save in 37 chances.

The Cardinals lead the second-place Pirates by seven games and will attempt to complete a three-game sweep on Thursday night. St. Louis improved to a season-best 33 games above .500 at 73-40.

McCutchen hit his 18th homer and Polanco had three hits for the second straight game for the Pirates, who are 0-5 in St. Louis and 5-2 against the Cardinals at home. The first four losses at Busch Stadium were all by one run.

Wacha scattered nine hits and three walks in six innings, allowing two runs. Pittsburgh left the bases loaded in the fourth and stranded two in the fifth and sixth.

Cole gave up three earned runs in 5 1/3 innings and is 0-2 in three starts this month while totaling 16 1/3 innings. A throwing error by second baseman Neil Walker on a potential double-play ball by Jason Heyward in the third handcuffed first baseman Pedro Alvarez on a short hop and led to the Cardinals’ first two runs.
View gallery
Wacha wins 14th, Cardinals beat Pirates 4-2
St. Louis Cardinals’ Yadier Molina tosses the bat after hitting an RBI triple in the sixth innin …

HEAD TO HEAD

Wacha is 2-0 with a 1.93 ERA in three starts against Pittsburgh. Cole has lost three straight starts on the road after winning the previous three and is 0-2 with a 3.80 ERA against the Cardinals in four starts this season.

NICE BAT

Polanco had six straight hits, tying the franchise best this season, followed by an intentional walk in the sixth before flying out to open the ninth.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Pirates: Starling Marte was removed before the bottom of the third because of discomfort in his left hand from fouling off a ball in the first.

Cardinals: GM John Mozeliak is hopeful Matt Adams (quad surgery) can go on a rehab assignment before the end of the minor league season. Adams has been cleared to swing.

UP NEXT

Pirates: Francisco Liriano (7-6, 3.13) has a 2.53 ERA in his last 13 starts but is just 6-2 during that stretch.

Cardinals: Lance Lynn (9-6, 2.76) has been dominant at home with six wins and a 2.15 ERA.

— Associated Press —

Mizzou women’s basketball announces staff restructuring

riggertMissouriCOLUMBIA, Mo. – Mizzou Women’s Basketball head coach Robin Pingeton announced staff updates on Wednesday. RaeShara Brown has been named an assistant coach, while Willie Cox has transitioned into the role of director of recruiting.

“A lot of thought and conversation went into these moves within my staff,” Pingeton said. “We are constantly evaluating everything we do within our program. I believe these new roles and responsibilities align with RaeShara and Willie’s strengths individually and within our program.”

Brown, a native of Little Rock, Arkansas, spent the past season as the director of recruiting and player development, where she played a crucial role in the program’s day-to-day operations. Prior to that, she was a graduate assistant for the Tigers from 2012-14 and has been instrumental in marketing and social media initiatives for the program.

“Coach Brown was an incredible player for us at Mizzou and has since served in a variety of roles within our program,” Pingeton said. “She is very driven, passionate and knowledgeable. She has an outstanding basketball IQ and truly understands what it takes to be successful at this level. There is no doubt in my mind that she will do an outstanding job on the recruiting trail as well.”

A mainstay in the Mizzou backcourt from 2007-11, Brown appeared in every game she was eligible for while wearing a Tigers uniform. She was a 3-year starter and opened all 31 games as a junior and senior. Following her senior season, Brown was named second-team All-Big 12 with an average of 16.8 points and 5.9 rebounds per game. She earned honorable mention All-Big 12 recognition as a sophomore and is the program’s all-time steals leader with 273 during her career. Brown received a bachelor’s degree in nutritional sciences from Mizzou in 2011 and a master’s in educational psychology in 2014.

Cox has served as the recruiting coordinator for the Mizzou coaching staff since Pingeton arrived prior to the 2010-11 season. His vast experience and networking capabilities have played a large part in recruiting efforts during the revitalization of the program over the past five seasons. Prior to moving to Columbia, Cox was an assistant coach at Illinois State from 2003-10 under Pingeton, and he also was previously the head coach at Peoria (Ill.) Central High School.

“I have worked with Willie for over 12 years,” Pingeton said. “I don’t know that you can find someone that is more loyal. Willie adds so much value, experience and knowledge to our staff. As our program has grown, the need for a director of basketball recruiting has become apparent. I believe Willie is going to do an incredible job for us in this position.”

— Mizzou Athletics —

KU to play on ESPN’s Big Monday four times in 2016

riggertKUIRVING, Texas – For the 10th-straight season, the Kansas men’s basketball team will make four appearances on ESPN’s Big Monday, as announced by the Big 12 Conference Wednesday.

KU’s first Big Monday contest of 2016 will be featured inside historic Allen Fieldhouse and will kick off the season on Jan. 4 against Oklahoma. The Jayhawks will then hit the road for its next Big Monday matchup at Iowa State on Jan. 25. Kansas will also play host to Oklahoma State on Feb. 25 and at Texas on Feb. 29 in Big Monday battles.

In the Big 12 era, Kansas and Oklahoma have faced each other on ESPN’s Big Monday nine times, while the Jayhawks have played Iowa State and Texas on seven occasions. KU and OSU have met six times on Big Monday.

Since the inception of the Big 12 in 1996-97, Kansas is 54-19 all-time on ESPN’s Big Monday (31-1 at home, 23-18 on the road), including 35-11 under head coach Bill Self. Additionally, KU has won 24-straight Big Monday games in Allen Fieldhouse, which includes a 20-0 mark under Self.

2016 Big 12 Men’s Basketball Schedule on ESPN’s Big Monday
All games televised on ESPN and available on WatchESPN.com
Date – Game(s), All Times at 8 p.m. CT

January 4 – Oklahoma at KANSAS

January 18 – Oklahoma at Iowa State

January 25 – KANSAS at Iowa State

February 1 – Texas at Baylor

February 8 – Texas at Oklahoma

February 15 – Oklahoma State at KANSAS

February 22 – Iowa State at West Virginia

February 29 – KANSAS at Texas

— KU Athletics —

Royals cruise past Detroit for fifth straight win

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Lorenzo Cain had a huge night and wanted more.

Cain went 4 for 4 with a home run and Yordano Ventura pitched six scoreless innings as the Kansas City Royals defeated the Detroit Tigers 6-1 on Tuesday.

Needing a triple in his final at-bat to complete the cycle, Cain sliced a single to right field and was out trying to stretch it into a double in the eighth inning.

“I wanted it bad,” Cain said about the cycle. “(Jarrod) Dyson definitely reminded me before I went up to hit. I was looking to drive a ball to right-center or right field somewhere. Unfortunately I didn’t hit it hard enough to get it to the gap. I ended up sliding in for a single.”

Cain, who raised his average to .316, led off the sixth with his 12th homer, a mammoth shot to left field.

“It felt amazing,” he said. “It was a curveball. They’ve definitely been throwing me a lot of off speed lately, far more than I’ve ever seen in my life. I was trying to adjust and stay on it, wait back. I was definitely sitting on off speed there. I ended up putting a good swing on it and it went out of the park.”

Mike Moustakas snapped an 0-for-18 drought with a homer to right with Kendrys Morales aboard in the same inning.

Ventura (7-7), who is 3-1 since the All-Star break, limited the Tigers to two hits but walked a career-high six. He struck out eight, matching his season high.

“Ventura wasn’t crazy wild,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “He was not missing by much. He stayed confident, stayed calm and continued to make pitches.”

Eric Hosmer hit a two-run homer in the first, giving him 21 RBI in the opening inning.

Anibal Sanchez (10-10) yielded all three homers, bringing his season total to 28 — tied for most in the American League. Sanchez yielded only 13 homers combined in the past two seasons.

“I don’t know what to say about it,” Sanchez said. “I don’t know what’s happened. I don’t get rattled. I just give up the home runs.”

Moustakas also stroked a run-scoring single in the eighth for his third three-RBI game of the year.

The Tigers snapped a season-worst 17-inning scoreless drought with a run in the seventh against reliever Franklin Morales. Pinch-hitter Rajai Davis’ sacrifice fly scored Jefry Marte, who led off with a double.

Luke Hochevar worked 2 2/3 spotless innings for his first save since Aug. 8, 2013, against Boston.

DEFENSIVE DANDIES

The Royals made five defensive gems, including throwing out James McCann at the plate when he attempted to score on Marte’s double to deep left-center. “I was surprised,” Yost said. “I didn’t think they had a chance to get him. I was shocked they did. When Dyson made a good throw to Esky (shortstop Alcides Escobar), I still didn’t think they had a chance. The defense was just spectacular tonight.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Tigers: 1B Miguel Cabrera (left calf strain) took batting practice and could come off the disabled list this weekend for a series at Houston.

Royals: C Salvador Perez left after seven innings with inflammation in his sore wrist, which has been bothering him for a few days, manager Ned Yost said. . RHP Wade Davis (stiff back) has not pitched since Thursday.

UP NEXT

Tigers: Rookie LHP Daniel Norris makes his third start since being acquired in a trade with the Blue Jays.

Royals: RHP Edinson Volquez, who is 1/3 with a 4.98 ERA in four career starts against Detroit, draws the assignment for the series finale.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis edges Pittsburgh 4-3 in series opener

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — All season, the St. Louis Cardinals have tried to minimize the innings load for Carlos Martinez and Michael Wacha, saving their two young pitchers for the postseason.

During a 4-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday night, manager Mike Matheny said the 23-year-old Martinez was simply too good to take out early. In the eighth inning, he judged “awkward swings” from the Pirates.

“The potential win supersedes anything we have in place right now,” Matheny said. “Right then we needed our best pitcher, and to me he was the best pitcher we had for that situation, and I think he proved that.”

Yadier Molina tied it with a sacrifice fly and rookie Stephen Piscotty singled in the go-ahead run on consecutive at-bats off Jeff Locke (6-7) in the fifth inning. Kolten Wong singled twice for his first multihit game of the month and Piscotty had three hits.

Trevor Rosenthal struck out the side in the ninth for his 34th save in 36 chances. The Cardinals lead the Pirates by six games in the NL Central and are 6-5 in the season series with seven of the games decided by one run and five in the final at-bat.

“Carlos did what our pitching’s known for,” Wong said of the right-hander. “We’re facing some good pitching on that side and they’re going to face our best pitching. It’s exciting.”

Or excruciating, depending on your perspective.

“These guys are where they’re at because they play good solid baseball every night,” Locke said. “Very similar to the way we play every night.

“That’s our motto here, one more than the other team.”

Jason Heyward had two hits and two RBI. St. Louis is 72-40 overall, at 32 over .500 it matches the season’s high water mark, and 41-16 at home — both major league bests.

Pedro Alvarez homered on a drive estimated at 446 feet that put the Pirates up 3-2 in the fourth. Aramis Ramirez earned his 145th career RBI against St. Louis, most against the Cardinals among active players, and Gregory Polanco had three hits.

Martinez (12-4) began the game throwing more off-speed stuff than usual and gave up single runs in the first, third and fourth but kept it close for a breakthrough three-run fifth that began with consecutive walks to Wong and Jhonny Peralta. He matched his career high for innings, striking out eight with one walk, and allowed one runner in scoring position his last three innings.

“Before the eighth, Mike asked me how I felt, `Could I go one more inning?” Martinez said through an interpreter. “I said, `Yeah, I’m ready to go.”

CLOSE CALL

Pirates reliever Jared Hughes stayed in the game after deflecting a line drive by Piscotty with his glove that glanced off his cheek in the eighth. “I’ll never watch that replay,” Hughes said, adding that he thought anyone who watched it was certain it was “bad.”

SCHOOL DAYS

The opener drew a paid attendance of 41,273, an impressive number until you consider it’s the Cardinals’ lowest-paid gate in 24 games since the Minnesota Twins attracted 41,203 on June 16. School begins this week for many area schools.

GAME OF INCHES

Heyward beat out the relay for an RBI groundout after the Cardinals appealed and got a double-play call overturned in the first. He mistimed his leap on Polanco’s drive off the top of the wall in right field on a leadoff triple in the third.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Pirates: 3B Josh Harrison (broken left thumb) and SS Jordy Mercer (left knee MCL sprain) began rehab assignments Tuesday at Triple-A Indianapolis. Manager Clint Hurdle is hopeful both will rejoin the team “considerably before Sept. 1.”

Cardinals: OF Jon Jay (wrist) and 1B Matt Adams (quad) are taking swings but are not close to rehab assignments. GM John Mozeliak debunked the notion RHP Adam Wainwright (Achilles) could return this season.

UP NEXT

Wednesday’s game has a marquee pitching matchup. Pirates RHP Gerrit Cole (14-5, 2.39) leads the NL in wins and Cardinals RHP Michael Wacha (13-4, 2.92) is right behind. Cole is 0-3 with a 5.95 ERA in four starts against the Cardinals and 14-2 with a 1.82 ERA in his other 18 starts.

— Associated Press —

Chiefs hope rare bit of continuity yields success

Click the links below to hear post-practice audio from the Chiefs at MWSU.
riggertChiefsOffensive Coordinator Doug Pederson
WR Chris Conley

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs churned through four coaches in eight years before Andy Reid arrived, and far more offensive and defensive coordinators. Each of them had varying schemes and ideas, and the result was a hodge-podge of failure.

Alex Smith went through a similar experience in San Francisco, where the constant changes on the coaching staff nearly ran the former No. 1 draft pick right out of the league.

Reid and Smith are entering Year 3 together, though. Their assistant coaches have remained largely unchanged. And in a league in which turnover — coaches and players — is part of life, the Chiefs are hoping that unique period of continuity will yield success.

“I think that’s important. Continuity is a big thing,” said Reid, whose 14 seasons spent in Philadelphia are a prime example. “We all kind of know as a coaching staff where we’re going, what direction we’re going in, and I think that’s important. That’s a good thing.”

Historically, the Chiefs aren’t a franchise that goes through coaching staffs.

Hank Stram was in charge for the first 15 years, leading the Chiefs to their only Super Bowl title in 1969. Marty Schottenheimer spent a decade in the coach’s office, leading Kansas City to seven playoff appearances. Dick Vermeil spent five years in charge.

But things changed after he hung up the headset. Herm Edwards had the franchise in the midst of a massive rebuilding project when he was fired after three years. Todd Haley didn’t make it past his third year before he was let go, as much because he couldn’t get along with then-general manager Scott Pioli as anything. Romeo Crennel was fired after one horrific season in charge.

Chiefs chairman Clark Hunt said following Crennel’s dismissal that he wanted the franchise to be a model of consistency. So when Reid was let go by the Eagles, Hunt made an aggressive play for a coach whose hallmark over the years has been constancy and reliability.

So why is that continuity so important?

Start with the scheme. Reid and offensive coordinator Doug Pederson have a robust playbook at their disposal, but it is only as useful as the players’ knowledge of it. The fact that Smith, running back Jamaal Charles and other key pieces of the offense are in their third year running it takes much of the pressure off trying to digest everything in training camp.

“That’s the big thing, being in your third year, the guys understand our system,” Pederson explained. “So we’re putting them in the same situations that they would be in during the course of the game, and they are handling that very well, because they’re relying on past experience.”

Even the rookies can move along more quickly, because while everything may be new to them, they have what amounts to dozens of coaches — their well-versed teammates — helping them.

“The rookies have looked great,” second-year quarterback Aaron Murray said. “They’re just like the rest of us. They’ve come out and competed with the older guys.”

Another big benefit to continuity? Guys such as Charles that take a beating during the regular season need not absorb so much punishment before games count.

The star running back has not missed a practice this camp, but he often sits out when the team does 11-on-11, full-contact scrimmages. Charles already knows the playbook and its nuances, so why risk an injury? Especially after he was banged up much of last season.

“He knows what he’s doing, and we know what he can do, and he does a good job of taking care of his body,” Pederson said. But when the staff first got to Kansas City, “the reps were the biggest thing. Learning our offense was the biggest thing when we first got here.”

Finally, the Chiefs only play three games at Arrowhead Stadium in their first 11 — one of their designated homes games is in London. So in difficult environments where communication could be more challenging, an intimate knowledge of the system is crucial.

“This is our third year running as a group together,” tight end Travis Kelce said. “Our chemistry right now is through the roof.”

NOTES: WR Albert Wilson was dealing with an illness during Tuesday’s practice. OL Marcus Reed (right ankle) and DL Mike Catapano (groin) are also dealing with injuries. … The Chiefs have their final practice Wednesday before their preseason opener Saturday at Arizona.

— Associated Press —

Cueto tosses four-hit shutout against Tigers in Royals home debut

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Johnny Cueto could not have scripted a better introduction to the Kansas City fans.

Cueto threw a four-hitter in his home debut as the Royals beat the Detroit Tigers 4-0 on Monday night.

Cueto (1-1) did not allow a runner past second base, struck out eight and walked none. It was his sixth career shutout and second this season.

“The crowd really gave me an extra boost,” Cueto said with catching coach Pedro Grifol acting as his interpreter. “This is the most I’ve felt from a crowd; the intensity is by far the most.

“I felt really proud the fans were just feeding me that last little boost of energy I needed.”

Cueto, who was acquired from Cincinnati on July 26 for three pitching prospects, received a loud cheer as he went out for his warmup pitches and the standing ovations grew after every scoreless inning as he walked to the dugout.

Cueto struck out Anthony Gose on three pitches to begin the game as the festive Kauffman Stadium crowd roared with approval. Sluggerr, the Royals’ mascot, appeared wearing a Cueto-esque mane of dreadlocks.

When Cueto came out for the ninth, the Kauffman Stadium announced crowd of 36,672 rose in unison with a deafening roar that did not stop until long after he retired Victor Martinez on a fly ball to right fielder Alex Rios for the final out.

“A bunch of us were saying in the eighth inning just watch how loud this gets when he goes out for the ninth inning,” said Eric Hosmer, who had an RBI single in the seventh. “It was really cool to see and fun to be a part of it.

“It was pretty fun to see, his first game as a Royal at the K and hear the crowd out there in the ninth inning. It was a fun atmosphere tonight, a different feel tonight, a lot of people excited.”

Tigers manager Brad Ausmus complained to plate umpire Joe West that Cueto’s delivery was illegal, that he was stopping in his windup.

“Really, the way the rule reads, you’re not supposed to even alter your motion,” Ausmus said. “That’s the way the rule reads. They don’t enforce it. Well, he said if he stops it’s an illegal pitch.”

Tigers lefty Matt Boyd, who was acquired from Toronto on July 30 in the David Price trade, gave up three runs in the first inning.

Boyd (1-3), who beat Cueto and the Royals 2-1 last Wednesday when he allowed seven hits and one run over seven innings in his Tigers debut, gave up singles to Alcides Escobar and Ben Zobrist on his first two pitches.

Lorenzo Cain doubled to center, scoring both. Kendrys Morales’ one-out single produced the third run of the inning.

Zobrist went 3 for 3 with a walk. The Royals’ first five hitters — Escobar, Zobrist, Cain, Hosmer and Morales — went a combined 11 for 19 with four RBI.

J.D. Martinez doubled in the second for the Tigers’ only extra-base hit.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Tigers: 1B Miguel Cabrera (left calf strain) did light running around the bases. … RHP Alex Wilson (shoulder fatigue), threw a 12-pitch bullpen session. If his arm responds well Tuesday, he could be ready to pitch.

Royals: RHP Wade Davis (back stiffness) has not pitched since Thursday.

CHANGING LEFTIES

The Tigers optioned LHP Ian Krol, who had a 1/3 record with a 6.75 ERA in 26 relief appearances, to Triple-A Toledo. They recalled LHP Kyle Ryan from Toledo.

UP NEXT

Tigers: RHP Anabel Sanchez is 1-1 with a 5.59 ERA in three starts against the Royals this season.

Royals: RHP Yordano Ventura has an 8.18 ERA in two starts, both no-decisions, against the Tigers in 2015. He has yielded four home runs and 16 hits in 11 innings.

— Associated Press —

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