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Wainwright shuts down Brewers as Cards win 10-2

CardsMILWAUKEE (AP) — St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Adam Wainwright knew how tough it was for the Milwaukee Brewers to play Saturday after finding out that shortstop Jean Segura’s 9-month-old son had died.

But Wainwright had to push those thoughts aside as he pitched seven strong innings to lead the Cardinals to a 10-2 win over Milwaukee for a tie atop the NL Central.

The Brewers lost their seventh in a row.

Segura left the team and traveled home to the Dominican Republic, a day after his 9-month-old son died. The Brewers observed a moment of silence for Janniel Segura, and the clubhouse was closed before the game.

The 24-year-old shortstop was put on the bereavement list when he learned after the Brewers’ 7-6 loss to St. Louis on Friday night that his son had died. Manager Ron Roenicke said the boy had been ill.

“When something like that happens, you become a family,” Wainwright said. “Baseball as a whole becomes a family. There’s bigger things than baseball. I understand that he’s going through something that I hope I never, never have to go through. So our hearts and prayers go out to him.”

Cardinals manager Mike Matheny was catcher for the Cardinals when St. Louis pitcher Darryl Kile died of a heart problem on June 22, 2002.

“The extended family in (Milwaukee’s) clubhouse is hurting right along with him,” he said. “You can’t help but take a step back and just prioritize life. Prioritize just how fragile it is. It gives us perspective.”

“When that happened (Kile’s death), we had a lot of guys having a bunch of conversations you typically wouldn’t have inside a clubhouse,” Matheny said.

Wainwright (12-4) gave up two runs and five hits. He has allowed just four earned runs in his last six starts.

Wainwright helped himself with an RBI single and tied Cincinnati’s Alfredo Simon and the Yankees’ Masahiro Tanaka for the most wins in the majors.

St. Louis trailed Milwaukee by 6 1/2 games on July 1, but Wainwright knows how quickly a team’s fortune can change in a week. In fact, he said that a week ago.

“My quote was `In a week from now, we could be doing a completely different kind of interview,” he said. “It could be what has turned the season around for. And, that’s what’s happened. This game is a funny game of ups and downs. The teams that have the most ups and the least amount of downs end up winning the whole thing.”

Tony Cruz drove in a career-high three runs and Kolten Wong homered for the Cardinals.

“It’s nice to be able to make a little ground,” Matheny said. “It just comes back to playing each game the right way.”

For the Brewers, it was a most difficult day.

“I think everybody in the clubhouse was affected quite a bit,” manager Ron Roenicke said. “I don’t want to make excuses. We knew that we still have a game to play and a job to do, but we did not play well today.”

The Brewers have lost 11 of 12. They had held sole possession of first place since April 9.

Frustrated Brewers star Carlos Gomez struck out swinging in the fifth inning and tried three times without success to break the bat over his leg. He slammed his helmet and tore up his batting gloves.

Jimmy Nelson (1-1) went 4 1/3 innings, giving up eight runs and eight hits. He was recalled from Triple-A Nashville on Thursday to make his first start since replacing ineffective Marco Estrada in the rotation.

St. Louis took a 3-0 lead in the first inning. A two-out error by second baseman Scooter Gennett on a grounder set up Cruz’s two-run single.

Wong hit a two-run homer in the second. It was his fifth home run in the last six games since coming back from the disabled list.

Cruz doubled home a run in the third.

— Associated Press —

Mustangs stay hot with sweep of Branson

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs swept a doubleheader against Branson Friday night at Phil Welch Stadium, defeating the Nationals 4-0 and 10-4.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team has now won eight of its last nine games as they improve to 29-11 and they’re 19-10 in the MINK League.

In the opener, the game was scheduled as a seven-inning game but it went extras as the game was scoreless until the ninth inning when the Mustangs exploded for four runs to get the win.

St. Joseph, who was the visiting team because the game was a make-up from a rain out in Branson last month, got their first run on an RBI single from Ryan Abernathy.  Then Trent Hill drove in two runs and Abernathy scored the final run on a double steal.

Hill earned the win in relief as he threw two scoreless innings.  Jeremiah Figueroa started the game and he went five innings, allowing only two hits.  The National only had three hits the enitre game.

In game two, the Mustangs jumped out to a quick lead as they scored two in the first inning, two more in the third and four runs in the fourth inning.

Branson scored four in the sixth, but that was as close as they’d get as Jake Jones earned the win for St. Joe.

He threw five scoreless innings and allowed just three hits.  Jones struck out seven and walked two.

Mike Sherburne went 3-for-4 in the nightcap as he also drove in three runs.  Abernathy and Joe Koeper added two hits, two runs and two RBI each.

The Mustangs play another doubleheader Saturday night as they host Ozark inside Phil Welch Stadium.  The first pitch of game one is set for 5:00 p.m.

Kansas City drops second straight to Tigers

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Anibal Sanchez tossed seven stingy innings, Ian Kinsler and Miguel Cabrera drove in runs and the Detroit Tigers squeaked out a 2-1 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Friday night.

Sanchez (6-3) scattered eight hits without a walk to help the AL Central-leading Tigers take their second straight from Kansas City. The second-place Royals dropped 6 1-2 games back in the division with two games left before the All-Star break.

Salvador Perez drove in the only run for the Royals, who squandered a solid start by Danny Duffy (5-9). He gave up both runs, only one earned, while losing for the fourth time in five starts.

Joe Nathan worked around a single and a walk in the ninth inning to earn his 19th save, and gave Detroit its fifth straight win over the Royals at Kauffman Stadium this season.

Nathan got Nori Aoki to ground out on a full-count pitch to end the game.

The Royals appeared to be 90 feet from tying it with no outs in the eighth, when Aoki swiped second base and went to third when the throw from catcher Bryan Holaday squirted into center field.

While that was going on, though, plate umpire Chad Fairchild was calling batter interference on Lorenzo Cain for stepping into the way of the throw to second. Cain was out and Aoki was forced to make the long, slow trot back to first base. He wound up getting stranded by Joba Chamberlain.

After the Tigers opened the series with a 16-4 blowout Thursday night, Sanchez and Duffy waged an entertaining pitchers’ duel. And just like when they met in June, Sanchez was one run better.

Duffy surrendered a leadoff double to Austin Jackson and an RBI single to Kinsler in the first inning, and then gave up another run in the third when Cabrera hit a lazy sacrifice fly.

Duffy wound up allowing five hits while striking out six without a walk. He departed after hitting the Tigers’ Nick Castellanos leading off the seventh inning, but Kelvin Herrera — who hit the first batter he faced — managed to wiggle out of the jam without any more damage.

Meanwhile, Sanchez was churning through the Royals lineup.

They scored their only run in the first inning when Eric Hosmer stretched a single into a double and Perez followed with a base hit. Sanchez struck out Billy Butler to end the inning, and then kept Kansas City at bay over the next six — though none of them was clean.

Sanchez worked around a single in the second, a double in the third, a leadoff single in the fourth, and singles in the fifth and sixth innings without another run.

His tensest moment came in the seventh, when Mike Moustakas doubled off the wall in center field, missing a tying homer by a couple of feet. The Royals got Moustakas to third with a groundout, but Sanchez induced two more groundouts — one a magnificent spinning stab by shortstop Eugenio Suarez — to quietly end the threat.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals rally from six down to beat Brewers 7-6

CardsMILWAUKEE (AP) — Matt Holliday hit a solo homer with two outs in the top of the ninth inning off Brewers closer Francisco Rodriguez, completing the St. Louis’ Cardinals comeback from a six-run deficit for a 7-6 win Friday night over Milwaukee.

Milwaukee has lost six straight and 10 of 11 games.

Holliday sent the first-pitch changeup from Rodriguez (3-3) into the left-field seats to break the tie. The Cardinals hit four homers and cut the sliding Brewers’ lead in the NL Central to one game.

Trevor Rosenthal wrapped up six shutout innings for the St. Louis bullpen with his 28th save, getting two strikeouts after allowing a leadoff single to Aramis Ramirez in the bottom of the ninth. All-Star setup man Pat Neshek (4-0) tossed 1 1/3 scoreless innings for the win.

— Associated Press —

St. Joseph suffers 2-1 loss at home to Clarinda Thursday

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs had their six-game winning streak snapped Thursday night at Phil Welch Stadium as the lost to Clarinda 2-1.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team is now 27-11 and 17-10 in the MINK League.

The Mustangs scored the first run of the game in the bottom of the first inning as Brandon Huske scored on a Joe Koerper ground out.  That was all St. Joseph would get though as Clarinda pitchers allowed just six hits and none after the sixth inning.

Dixon Marble suffered the loss despite throwing well as he is now 0-2 this summer.  Marble went seven innings and allowed two runs on eight hits.  He struck out two and walked two batters.

Clarinda scored single runs in the fourth and seventh innings and that was enough to hold off the Mustangs.

St. Joseph is back at Phil Welch Friday for a doubleheader with the Branson Nationals.  The first pitch of game one is set for 5:30 p.m.

Royals get destroyed by Detroit in opener 16-4

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Everybody in Detroit’s lineup had at least one hit and scored one run, their season-best offensive onslaught spurring the Tigers to a 16-4 rout of the Kansas City Royals in the opener of their four-game series Thursday night.

The Tigers established a season-high for runs just two days after their 14-5 blitzing of the Dodgers, and took a 5 1/2-game lead over the second-place Royals in the AL Central.

Drew Smyly (5-8) allowed four runs on eight hits and a walk in 6 2/3 innings for Detroit.

Jeremy Guthrie (5-8) gave up a career-worst eight earned runs on eight hits, three walks and two hit batters. He was mercifully pulled with no outs in the fifth, which means the Royals’ veteran has now allowed 16 earned runs in eight-plus innings covering his last two starts.

The Tigers stunned the Royals with three runs in the first, added three more in the fourth and delivered the haymaker with a season-best eight-run fifth. Detroit wound up with 19 hits in the game, getting at least one hit and one run from all 11 players who stepped to the plate.

Torii Hunter led the charge, leading off the fifth with a homer and adding a single later in the inning to finish with three RBIs. Miguel Cabrera and J.D. Martinez also drove in three, and Ian Kinsler, Nick Castellanos and Eugenio Suarez drove in two runs apiece.

Billy Butler homered in the fourth for KC. Eric Hosmer hit a two-run shot in the seventh.

The hot-hitting Tigers have won three straight overall, and four straight in Kansas City, building some momentum with three games remaining before the All-Star break.

The tone of the game was set in the first inning, when four of the first five Tigers reached base. A series of singles, groundouts and sacrifice flies resulted in a 3-0 lead.

Kansas City scratched out a run in the second, only for Detroit to score three more in the fourth. Cabrera delivered the big blow with a two-out, two-run double.

The floodgates finally opened in the fifth, when Hunter began a parade of 12 batters to the plate with his 12th homer of the season. Castellanos also had two hits in the inning, and everybody in the lineup besides Austin Jackson and Don Kelly reached base before the carnage was over.

Guthrie was pulled after two batters, and recently signed Royals reliever Scott Downs gave up two more runs while retiring one batter. Louis Coleman, recalled from Triple-A Omaha, gave up four more runs to cap the worst pitching performance by the Royals this season.

Kansas City had previously allowed 12 runs in a loss to Toronto on May 31.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis falls short of series sweep against Pirates

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Edinson Volquez tossed a complete game six-hitter to win his fourth straight start and the Pittsburgh Pirates downed the St. Louis Cardinals 9-1 on Thursday night.

Neil Walker, Josh Harrison, Russell Martin and Andrew McCutchen all drove in two runs for Pittsburgh, which avoided being swept in the four-game series.

Volquez (8-6) has a 0.90 ERA in winning four consecutive starts for the first time in his career. He struck out five and walked two.

Shelby Miller (7-8) allowed four runs in five innings. He walked four and struck out one.

Walker extended his hitting streak to a season-high 12 games with a two-run double in the fifth that extended the Pirates lead to 4-1. McCutchen started the three-run uprising with a run-scoring single that broke a 1-all tie.

McCutchen drove in a run in the sixth with a sacrifice fly. Harrison added a two-run double in the inning that made it 6-1.

Martin homered off Jason Motte in the ninth. Martin drove in his 500th career run in the first inning.

The Cardinals were playing without All-Star catcher Yadier Molina, who tore a ligament in his right thumb in Wednesday’s 5-2 win. Molina will undergo surgery on Friday and is expected to miss 8 to 12 weeks.

St. Louis tied it in the third on a sacrifice fly by Matt Carpenter. Kolten Wong began the inning with a single.

— Associated Press —

Mizzou’s Evan Boehm, Markus Golden, named to Outland, Nagurski watch lists

riggertMizzouUniversity of Missouri standout football players Evan Boehm (Lee’s Summit, Mo.) and Markus Golden (St. Louis, Mo.) have been named to pre-season award watch lists for a pair of prominent national awards, as announced today.

Boehm, a junior center, has been named to the Outland Trophy Watch List as one of 64 players up for the award, which goes to the nation’s top interior linemen on either side of the ball.  This is the second national award to include Boehm, who has started all 26 games for the Tigers the past two years.  On Tuesday, he was named to the watch list for the Rimington Award, which is given annually to the nation’s top center.

Golden, a senior defensive end, has been included on the watch list for the Bronko Nagurski Trophy, which goes annually to the nation’s top defensive player overall.  He is one of 81 standouts named to the pre-season list.  Golden was one of the most disruptive defensive ends in the Southeastern Conference in 2013, despite playing only roughly 40 percent of the snaps (55 tackles, 13.0 tackles for loss, 6.5 sacks, 8 QB pressures).  Mizzou’s Michael Sam was a Nagurski finalist in 2013 for his standout play during MU’s 12-2 campaign last year.

Both Boehm and Golden, along with projected starting quarterback Maty Mauk (sophomore, Kenton, Ohio) will be representing Mizzou at the annual SEC Football Media Day event next week in Hoover, Ala.  Mizzou’s appearance is scheduled for Wednesday, July 16th.  Preseason camp for the Tigers gets underway on Monday, August 4th, with the annual Fan/Photo Day at Memorial Stadium/Faurot Field set for Sunday, August 10th.

— MU Sports Information —

Three Wildcats named to FWAA watch lists

riggertKStateThree Kansas State players – offensive linemen B.J. Finney and Cody Whitehair, and defensive end Ryan Mueller – were named to watch lists for awards announced by the Football Writers Association of America (FWAA) on Thursday.

Finney and Whitehair were named to the watch list for the Outland Trophy, presented to the nation’s most outstanding interior lineman, while Mueller is a candidate for the Bronko Nagurski Trophy, presented to the nation’s most outstanding defensive player.

This marks the second-straight season that Finney is a candidate for the Outland Trophy, while he was also named to the watch list for the 2014 Rimington Award on Tuesday. K-State is one of four teams to place multiple players on the Outland Trophy watch list. Mueller is a first-time candidate for the Bronko Nagurski Trophy and picked up his third preseason honor as he is also a candidate for the Bednarik Award and the Lott IMPACT Trophy. The Leawood, Kansas, also registered K-State’s sixth candidacy for the Nagurski Trophy in the last four years.

The watch list for the 2014 Outland Trophy includes 64 players across the country, including nine from the Big 12, while the 2014 Bronko Nagurski Trophy watch list is comprised of 81 total players and 13 from the Big 12.

Finney and Whitehair started all 13 games in 2013 at center and left guard, respectively. They helped the Wildcats average 35.9 points per game and 404.7 yards per game during the final seven contests of the year in which K-State tallied a 6-1 record. Both Kansas natives, Finney and Whitehair earned All-Big 12 status a year ago as Finney, a product of Andale, was a first-team honoree, and Whitehair, from Abilene, picked up second-team honors.

The 2013 Big 12 Defensive Lineman of the Year, Mueller tied the school record in sacks with 11.5, a figure that ranked second in the Big 12 and eighth nationally. His total included a school-record tying three sacks at Texas Tech as he picked up Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week accolades, while he also earned the honor following the Iowa State game by totaling seven tackles with 2.5 sacks.

The Wildcats kick off the 2014 season with an August 30, matchup against Stephen F. Austin at Bill Snyder Family Stadium. The sixth-annual K-State Family Reunion will begin at 6:10 p.m.

— KSU Sports Information —

Kansas City’s Alex Gordon to miss All-Star game

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Alex Gordon will have to be content with watching All-Star teammates Salvador Perez and Greg Holland when the Royals triumvirate heads to Target Field in Minneapolis next week.

The Royals announced Thursday that Gordon will miss the annual Midsummer Classic after visiting with a specialist and receiving an injection for his sprained right wrist. Angels shortstop Erick Aybar was added to the American League roster as his replacement.

Gordon, Holland and Perez are all headed to their second straight All-Star game.

”Obviously this is not what I wanted to happen, especially coming into the All-Star break and being on the All-Star team, but the most important thing is to be ready for our games,” Gordon said before the start of a four-game series Thursday night against Detroit.

”To be healthy after the All-Star break is the big thing here,” he said.

Gordon spent nearly seven years in the big leagues before making his first All-Star team last season, and the three-time Gold Glove winner is having another solid year. Along with sure-handed defense in left field, he was hitting .268 with nine homers and 44 RBIs.

”It’s an honor to be part of the game, whether you play or not,” Gordon said. ”Just to be around some of the greatest players in the game and experience all the festivities that go with it, (Derek) Jeter’s last All-Star game and things like that, it’s special.”

Royals manager Ned Yost said he’s holding off on putting Gordon on the disabled list in hopes that resting him against Detroit and during the All-Star break will be enough.

Meanwhile, Royals left-hander Jason Vargas remained in Florida after undergoing an emergency appendectomy on Wednesday night. Yost said that Vargas, who is 8-4 with a 3.31 ERA, was expected to remain hospitalized on Thursday before returning to Kansas City on Friday.

Reliever Louis Coleman was recalled from Triple-A Omaha to take his place on the roster.

Third baseman Mike Moustakas was also feeling better after an illness, Yost said, though he remained out of the starting lineup. Danny Valencia was taking his place.

The recent spate of injuries and sickness hardly tarnishes what has been a positive first half for the Royals, who began the 4 1/2 games behind the Tigers in the AL Central.

Their pitching staff and defense have been among the best in baseball, and an offense that was the culprit in an early season swoon has shown signs in the past couple of weeks of turning around.

The fact that Kansas City got its three amigos in Gordon, Perez and Holland back in the All-Star game is a testament to how far the club has come.

For much of the past two decades, the long-downtrodden franchise has struggled to identify its requisite token All-Star.

Hence, guys such as Mark Redman and Gil Meche found their way onto rosters.

”We were kind of hoping for a few more guys to join us,” Holland said, ”but it’s special to be around Salvy, because he’s helped me personally so much, and so has Gordo, diving and throwing guys out at the plate. Between those two, that’s a big part of my success.”

Perez was voted into the starting lineup this season, but he’ll have a hard time trumping the way he finished his first appearance. He was inserted in last year’s game in time to catch the final pitch that the Yankees’ Mariano Rivera made in an All-Star game.

Holland had pitched the previous inning last year, and remembers walking to the mound at Citi Field in New York and thinking, ”Just don’t screw this up for Mo.”

Now, he’s hoping to be the final pitcher that the AL squad uses in a victory.

”For me it’s rewarding because I’m proud of my work ethic, being able to not be complacent – ‘Hey, I made an All-Star team,’ and start changing your routine. We’ve stayed at it,” Holland said. ”You’re rewarded in multiple years means you’re staying consistent, you’re continuing to work and continuing to get better.”

— Associated Press —

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