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St. Joseph snaps 2-game skid with 2-0 win against North Kansas City

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs snapped a two-game losing streak Friday night with a 2-0 victory over North Kansas City in a non-league game at Phil Welch Stadium.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team had been shut out the previous two games and the offense struggled again against North Kansas City, but two runs was all they needed.

The Mustangs got a 2-out RBI single from Mike Sherburne in the fourth inning to break a scoreless tie and then St. Joseph scored an unearned run on an error by NKC second baseman Patrick Burns.

Sherburne, Joe Koerper and Zac Johnson were the only Mustangs to get a hit with one single each.

Jeremiah Figueroa picked up the win as he went six innings and allowed just four hits.  He struck out four and walked three.

Redmond Floyd, Jayme Lovelace and Grant Gavin threw one inning each of relief to hold off North Kansas City.

St. Joe improves to 20-8 this season and they’re back at home Saturday against the Ozark Generals.  The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m. and it’ll air on 680 KFEQ and here on StJosephPost.com.

Infante’s grand slam lifts Royals to 8-6 win over Angels

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Omar Infante capped a seven-run inning with his first career grand slam, and the Kansas City Royals held on to beat the Los Angeles Angels 8-6 on a rough Friday night for starting pitchers.

Jason Vargas and Angels counterpart Matt Shoemaker (5-2) combined to give up 14 runs on 20 hits — four of them home runs. Neither got an out in the fifth inning.

Michael Mariot (1-0) picked up his first career win with 1 1/3 innings of relief, and Greg Holland earned his 23rd save by tossing a perfect ninth.

Salvador Perez had three hits while Lorenzo Cain, Billy Butler and Alex Gordon each drove in a run for Kansas City, which ended the Angels’ six-game winning streak despite limping into the series having lost six of seven.

C.J. Cron hit two homers for Los Angeles, and Mike Trout sent a shot to center in the first inning that cleared the fence, four rows of seats and a walkway before landing in a fountain.

Trout’s mammoth drive only counted for one run, though, and on a muggy night with a brisk breeze blowing out to left field, it was going to take more than that to win.

Cron added a homer to left with two outs in the second inning, but Kansas City quickly erased its two-run deficit in the third by matching its biggest inning of the season.

The seven-run outburst against Shoemaker began with a double by Alcides Escobar, who added a single later in the inning. Jarrod Dyson, Cain and Eric Hosmer hit singles, Butler walked, Gordon hit a sacrifice fly and Perez added another base hit.

By that point, the Royals had pulled ahead 3-2 and the bases were loaded for Infante, who hit a high fly to left field that carried just over the wall and landed in the bullpen.

His first career grand slam came in his 1,268th game.

Butler added an RBI single in the fourth to make it 8-2. Shoemaker finished the inning but did not emerge for the fifth after allowing eight runs on 11 hits and a walk.

The rookie was 5-0 with a 3.00 ERA in his previous seven starts.

Vargas nearly squandered the big cushion when Cron hit a two-run shot in the fifth for his first career multihomer game. David Freese, Chris Iannetta and Collin Cowgill joined Trout in stringing together enough hits to eventually put up four runs.

Howie Kendrick nearly tied the game with a shot to the wall in right, but Cain caught it on a sprint at the warning track to end the inning and preserve the Royals’ 8-6 lead.

Despite some hiccups, their bullpen tossed five scoreless innings to seal the win.

— Associated Press —

Mustangs lose at Joplin, shutout for second straight game

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs were shutout for the second consecutive game Thursday night as they lost at Joplin, 4-0.

It’s the second time this season that St. Joe’s summer college baseball team has dropped back-to-back games as they are now 19-8 and 12-7 in the MINK League.

The Mustangs had just five hits in the game and advanced a runner past first base only twice against the Outlaws.

Joplin broke through in the third and fourth innings as they scored two runs in each inning off St. Joseph starter Trent Kinney.

Kinney lasted just 3.2 innings as he allowed four runs on eight hits.  Dixon Marble threw well in relief as he went the final 4.1 innings and gave up only two hits.

The Mustangs return home to Phil Welch Stadium Friday night for a non-league game against North Kansas City.  The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m.

Missouri’s Clarkson drafted by Wizards in 2nd round, traded to Lakers

MUMizzou Basketball continues to have success on NBA Draft night. Jordan Clarkson (San Antonio, Texas) became the fourth former Missouri standout to hear his name called in the NBA Draft since 2012 as he was selected by the Washington Wizards (Rd. 2, No. 46 overall) before having the Los Angeles Lakers trade for his draft rights Thursday night.

Clarkson joins Kim English (Detroit Pistons, 2012), Marcus Denmon (San Antonio Spurs, 2012) and Alex Oriakhi (Phoenix Suns, 203) as Tigers drafted into the NBA since 2012. They also join Phil Pressey (2013, Boston Celtics) who played in 75 games and averaged 3.2 assists per contest for the Boston Celtics last season as a free agent.

“What an incredible honor for Missouri to have Jordan Clarkson selected in tonight’s NBA Draft,” Mizzou Head Coach Kim Anderson said. “Missouri, from my time here as a player, on through my time as a coach, has helped produce some great NBA talent and that trend will continue. I had the privilege to coach against and follow Jordan and also Jabari Brown’s careers here at Mizzou and I applaud them for their hard work, passion and professionalism in all areas of life. I will continue to follow all of our former players as professionals and look forward to welcoming them back home to Mizzou for many years to come.”

Clarkson becomes the 44th Tiger drafted all-time. He is also joins former Mizzou standout Kareem Rush to be drafted and then traded for by the Lakers since the 2002 draft. Rush was drafted No. 20 overall in 2002 by Toronto before heading to LA.

In his one season in a Mizzou uniform Clarkson was named Second Team All-Southeastern Conference (2014) and ranked second on the team in scoring (17.5 ppg) and tops in assists (3.4). He reached double-figures in 34-of-35 games as a junior and was named the SEC’s Player of the Week on three occasions. Also named a Wooden Award National Player of the Year Midseason Top 25 performer, Clarkson scored a career high 31 points in Missouri’s home win over Southern Illinois (Nov. 12) and ranked second on the team with 14 20-point scoring games. The San Antonio, Texas, native topped 20 points in five consecutive non-league contests including 25 points vs. West Virginia (Dec. 5) and 21 vs. UCLA (Dec. 7). He dished a career high eight assists to go with 25 points vs. Illinois (Dec. 21) in the annual Bud Light Braggin’ Rights game and narrowly missed 30-point games with 28 coming against national runner-up Kentucky (Feb. 1) and 27 vs. Arkansas (Feb. 13).

Clarkson also finished among the SEC’s Top 10 in several statistical categories, including scoring (seventh, 17.5), assists (seventh, 3.4), field goal percentage (ninth, .447), assist/turnover ratio (ninth, 1.3) and minutes played (third, 35.1).

Clarkson is the fourth Tiger headed to the Lakers on draft night. In addition to Rush (2002), he joins Anthony Peeler (1992) and Charles Henke (1961).

— MU Sports Information —

Cardinals drop series opener at Los Angeles 1-0

CardsLOS ANGELES (AP) — Pinch-hitter Justin Turner delivered an RBI single in the eighth inning off Adam Wainwright, and the Los Angeles Dodgers edged the St. Louis Cardinals 1-0 Thursday night in their first meeting since last year’s NL championship series.

Josh Beckett pitched seven sharp innings in a tight duel with Wainwright, who held the Dodgers hitless through five. Left fielder Matt Kemp threw out a Cardinals runner at the plate in the seventh.

Juan Uribe, just off the disabled list after missing 34 games with a right hamstring strain, led off the eighth with a single and advanced on a sacrifice bunt by Drew Butera before rookie Miguel Rojas’ infield single put runners at the corners.

Turner, batting for reliever Brian Wilson, came through with his 20th RBI of the season.

Wilson (1-2) pitched a perfect inning and Kenley Jansen got three outs for his 24th save.

Wainwright (10-4) took a hard-luck loss. He gave up five hits while going the distance for the 19th time in 201 regular-season starts. The right-hander was runner-up to Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw in last year’s NL Cy Young Award voting.

Beckett scattered four hits, walked two and struck out four. The right-hander has a 1.34 ERA over his last seven starts, a stretch that began with his no-hitter in Philadelphia on May 25. His season ERA is 2.11 in 15 starts.

Wainwright walked his first batter, Dee Gordon, then retired 15 in a row before Rojas led off the sixth with a clean single to left field. Beckett followed with a Texas Leaguer to right, and Allen Craig made a diving catch with the outfield playing shallow against the pitcher.

Gordon followed with a bloop single to left, but Yasiel Puig grounded into a double play started by third baseman Matt Carpenter. Puig, the NL player of the month for May, is batting .242 with no homers, six RBIs and 25 strikeouts in 25 games since his last home run on May 28 against Cincinnati’s Homer Bailey at Dodger Stadium.

Craig hit a two-out double in the seventh, just beyond Puig’s reach on the right-field warning track, then tried to score on Jon Jay’s sharp single to left. Kemp charged the ball and threw a perfect strike to Butera in front of the plate for a sweep tag as Beckett thrust both arms over his head in jubilation.

Cardinals manager Mike Matheny challenged the call by umpire Vic Carapazza, but a replay review upheld the decision and the game remained scoreless.

The Cardinals won 97 games last season, five more than Los Angeles, and beat the Dodgers in the NLCS. Wainwright won Game 3 at Dodger Stadium.

— Associated Press —

KU’s Wiggins goes No. 1 in NBA Draft; Embiid selected 3rd

KUFor the second time in Kansas men’s basketball history, a Jayhawk was taken No. 1 in the NBA Draft. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver announced that the Cleveland Cavaliers selected Andrew Wiggins with the first selection in the 2014 NBA Draft Thursday night at the Barclays Center.

Only two picks later, Kansas big man Joel Embiid joined him when the Philadelphia 76ers selected Embiid with the third overall selection. No two Jayhawks have ever gone as high, surpassing the 1998 duo of Raef LaFrentz (3), Paul Pierce (10).

The duo became the 75th and 76th players to be drafted in Kansas men’s basketball history and the 17th and 18th in the Bill Self era. It also marks the 24th time – and fifth-consecutive year – that multiple Jayhawks were drafted.

Wiggins became the second-ever No. 1 selection in Kansas basketball history, joining Danny Manning in 1988. Jayhawk Wilt Chamberlain was a territorial selection in 1959 by the Philadelphia Warriors after leaving KU for the Harlem Globetrotters in 1958.

“I was nervous. It (the clock) hit zero and we had to wait another two minutes. It’s crazy.” Wiggins smiled on the ESPN broadcast. “(I plan on) just going in and creating impact off the bat, play my game and have confidence in myself.  I have to believe in myself before anyone else can.”

Wiggins, from Vaughan, Ontario, Canada, was joined by head coach Bill Self at the draft and became the 30th first-round draft pick in Kansas men’s basketball history. His call-up to the professional ranks marks the fifth-straight season a Jayhawk has been selected in the first round, while the top-overall pick makes three-straight seasons that a Jayhawk has gone in the top-10 overall. Wiggins joins Ben McLemore, who was the seventh overall pick in the 2013 draft by the Sacramento Kings, and Thomas Robinson, the fifth overall pick in the 2012 NBA Draft, also by the Kings.

A Consensus All-America Second Team selection, Wiggins set the Kansas freshman single-season scoring record with 597 points in 2013-14, making him the second-straight Jayhawk to surpass Danny Manning’s record-setting rookie mark in 1985. McLemore broke Manning’s mark with 589 points in 2012-13 before declaring for the Draft.

The 2014 Big 12 Freshman of the Year and All-Big 12 First Team selection, Wiggins was his own highlight reel throughout the year, including a half-court shot at Baylor (2/4), the game-winning basket at Texas Tech (2/18) and a KU freshman record 41 points at West Virginia (3/8) – the first Jayhawk to break the 40-point barrier since Terry Brown scored 42 points on Jan. 5, 1991. In the Big 12 Conference Championship alone, Wiggins averaged 26.0 points per game to earn all-tournament honors.

On the defensive end, Wiggins led Kansas in steals with 41 and came in second to Joel Embiid, KU’s freshman season shot-blocking leader, with 34 blocked shots. Gifted and athletic, the combo guard pulled down 5.9 rebounds a game.Besides his 597 points, other Kansas freshman season records Wiggins set included: scoring average (17.1), field goals attempted (422), free throws made (176) and free throws attempted (227).

The 2014 Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year, Embiid broke the KU freshman record for blocked shots with 72 and his 2.6 blocked shots per game finished second in the league. Named to the 2014 All-Big 12 Second Team, Embiid led KU with 8.1 rebounds per game – also a KU freshman record – and good for sixth in the Big 12. The 7-0 Yaoundé, Cameroon, native averaged 11.2 points per game and his 62.6 field goal percentage broke yet another KU rookie record. Additionally, Embiid was named to the 2014 Freshman All-America Team, along with Wiggins, by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association (USBWA).

Embiid was a two-time Big 12 Newcomer of the Week – Dec. 2, 2013 and Jan. 20, 2014 – and was named the Wayman Tisdale National Freshman of the Week and CBSSports.com National Player of the Week on Jan. 21, 2014 after averaging a double-double with 14.5 points and 10.0 rebounds to go along with 13 blocked shots in KU victories against then-top-10 opponents Iowa State (1/13) and Oklahoma State (1/18). Included was a KU freshman-record eight blocked shots against OSU.

Embiid missed the final two regular-season games and the Big 12 Championship due to a stress fracture in his lower back. He was sidelined from KU’s two NCAA Tournament contests, as well. While Embiid fully recovered from the injury and resumed basketball activities, surgery on a stress fracture in his right foot last Friday prevented him from attending the draft.

“It is different (not being in New York) with the support. I wish I could be there but I’m excited,” Embiid said in an ESPN interview from his watch party in California. “The Sixers just took me and I still can’t believe it. I started playing basketball so late and just being here means that anything is possible.”

— KU Sports Information —

St. Joseph gets blanked by Kansas City Monarchs

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs had their four-game winning streak snapped Wednesday night as they were shutout by the Kansas City Monarchs, 3-0, in a non-league game at Phil Welch Stadium.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team struggled offensively Wednesday as they no baserunner reached second base until the ninth inning and that was the only frame they had multiple runners on base.

Andrew Standifer and Mike Sherburne had singles in the first inning, but the Mustangs didn’t get another hit until the seventh.

Sherburne had two of the five Mustang hits in the game.

The Monarchs offense didn’t do much either as they had just three hits.  But the biggest hit came from former Mustang Jordan Hurtt as he led off the sixth with a triple and scored on a Morgan Johann sacrifice fly.

Kansas City added two more in the eighth inning without getting a hit.  The Monarchs were able to draw two walks in the inning and St. Joe committed an error.  The Monarchs they scored one run on a passed ball and another on a wild pitch.

Mustangs’ starter Miles Gully (2-2) was the tough luck loser as he went 7.1 innings, allowing two runs on three hits.  Gully struck out two and walked one.

St. Joseph is now 19-7 this season and they get back into MINK League play Thursday as they play at Joplin.  The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m.

Bases-loaded HBP in 8th helps Dodgers beat KC 5-4

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Wade Davis plunked A.J. Ellis of the Dodgers with the bases loaded and two outs in the eighth inning Wednesday night, sending Los Angeles to a 5-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals.

Jamey Wright (3-2) threw 2 2/3 scoreless innings in relief of Dan Haren to pick up the win.

Davis (5-2) had not allowed a run in 22 1/3 innings spanning his last 20 outings. But after nearly escaping a jam by catching Adrian Gonzalez in a rundown between third base and home for the second out of the eighth, the reliever walked Scott Van Slyke to load the bases.

Davis then had a 1-2 count on Ellis before hitting him in the shoulder.

J.P. Howell and Brandon League worked the bottom of the eighth for the Dodgers, and Brian Wilson handled the ninth in place of closer Kenley Jansen for his first save since April 12, 2012.

It wasn’t easy. Danny Valencia hit a one-out single and pinch-runner Pedro Ciriaco stole second — he was initially called out but the call was overturned by replay. But Wilson got Lorenzo Cain to line out to first base, and Ciriaco was doubled off second to end the game.

Matt Kemp homered and Gonzalez and Yasiel Puig drove in a run apiece for the Dodgers, while Dee Gordon had four hits and his league-leading 40th stolen base.

Cain and Jarrod Dyson hit solo shots for the Royals.

Haren gave up two homers among six hits, walked two and was pulled after throwing 92 pitches in 4 1/3 innings. The three-time All-Star had gone at least five innings while allowing four earned runs or fewer in his previous 15 starts with the Dodgers, the longest streak by any pitcher to begin his career with the club in the last 100 years.

James Shields wasn’t much better, though he lasted a whole lot longer. After breezing through the first, the Royals’ ace allowed four runs, seven hits and a walk in seven innings.

Shields gave away the 1-0 lead that Cain supplied with his leadoff homer when Kemp went deep in the second. Shields then allowed two more runs in the third on consecutive triples by Gordon and Puig — Gordon scored on a balk by Shields — and a groundout by Gonzalez.

The Royals got one back in the fourth on Mike Moustakas’s RBI single, but Los Angeles restored its cushion in the fifth when Gordon singled, swiped second and scored on Puig’s double.

Kansas City finally squared things in the bottom half. Dyson led off with a homer, his first in 277 at-bats, and Billy Butler’s groundout was enough to score Cain from third.

But when the game came down to a battle of bullpens, the Dodgers’ proved to be better.

— Associated Press —

Western basketball attendance breaks into Top 30 in Division II

riggertMissouriWesternMissouri Western men’s basketball placed 29th for the 2013-14 Division II men’s basketball attendance averaging 1,401 (19,609) fans for its 14 home contests. Northern (S.D.) State out of the NSIC led Division II with an average of 3,383 (54,129) fans per home game.

The Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association led the nation in Division II men’s basketball attendance average for the 2013-14 season, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) announced recently.

The MIAA drew 262,573 fans to its 14 institutions’ 199 home games last season for an average of 1,319 fans per home game. The MIAA averaged 100 fans more then the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference which averaged 1,228 per game.

Other MIAA schools which cracked the top 30 were Fort Hays State in third with 2,717 fans per game, Central Missouri in the sixth position with 2,257 fans per game, Washburn came in 15th with 1,907 fans, Emporia State came in 22nd with 1,549 fans and Missouri Southern came in 25th drawing 1,496 fans per contest.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Adams homers again, Cardinals rally to beat Rockies 9-6

ChiefsDENVER (AP) — A strong start and an impressive finish helped the St. Louis Cardinals pull off a series victory over the Colorado Rockies.

Rookie left-hander Marco Gonzales had a strong start to his major league career before stumbling in the fourth inning, but the Cardinals’ bats helped him with a late rally.

Matt Adams homered and drove in two runs, Matt Holliday had three hits, and St. Louis came back to beat the Rockies 9-6 on Wednesday.

“A great win,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. “It was one of my favorite wins.”

Drew Stubbs homered, and Justin Morneau had two hits for the Rockies, who finished their homestand 1-5.

The game featured the major league debuts of both starting pitchers. Gonzales was sharp early before faltering. Colorado’s Yohan Flande also started well before getting hit hard in his last inning.

Pat Neshek (2-0) pitched an inning in relief to earn the win. Trevor Rosenthal got four outs for his 23rd save in 26 chances.

The Cardinals scored twice in the eighth off Adam Ottavino (0-3) on RBI doubles by Daniel Descalso and Matt Carpenter to take a win away from Flande.

“I don’t have any answers for today. I feel horrible that I gave it up,” Ottavino said. “I thought I made good pitches and they found holes.”

St. Louis added two more runs in the ninth on two of the club’s four sacrifice flies.

The Cardinals then had to grind out a win in the bottom of the inning when Rosenthal walked two batters to bring the tying run to the plate. He struck out Troy Tulowitzki on a 100-mph fastball, the 11th pitch of the at-bat, before Morneau flied out to center to end it.

“Wow, that’s just like two heavyweights standing in the middle of the ring just swinging at each other,” Matheny said. “That was impressive. That at-bat was pretty impressive on his side. Trevor stayed with it.”

Pitching near where he was an all-state player for Rocky Mountain High School in Fort Collins, Colorado, from 2007-10, Gonzales was unhittable the first time through the order.

At one point he threw 12 straight strikes, and 30 of his first 37 pitches were strikes. He had only one blemish, a one-out walk to DJ LeMahieu in the second.

“It was the best day of my life right there,” Gonzales said. “It was a blast. A lot of family that I haven’t seen in a while, a lot of friends flying in from everywhere. I’m very grateful for it.”

The Cardinal-friendly crowd cheered throughout but gave him his loudest ovation when he struck out Tulowitzki on three changeups in the first inning.

“Obviously that caught everybody’s attention,” Matheny said. “A couple of guys went up there hunting it after that. It’s one of the better changeups we have in our organization, and he’s able to locate it.”

Things unraveled for him in the fourth.

Stubbs hit the first pitch of the inning into the seats in left to tie it 1-1. After Tulowitzki fouled out, the next five batters reached base. Corey Dickerson had a two-run double and scored on LeMahieu’s single, and Josh Rutledge came home on Flande’s groundout that made it 5-1.

“Three innings strong and the fourth inning just couldn’t locate offspeed stuff,” Gonzales said. “From there hitters eliminate it. When your fastball’s elevated it doesn’t help, either. It was really one bad inning, a couple of good swings.”

Flande is the fourth starting pitcher this month to make his major league debut for the Rockies. Injuries to the staff forced the call-ups but two of those pitchers — Eddie Butler and Christian Bergman — are now injured.

Flande allowed just one run through the first four innings but the Cardinals rallied for three in the fifth. Mark Ellis scored on a sacrifice fly, and Adams followed Holliday’s double with his third home run of the series to make it 5-4.

Flande was touched for four runs and six hits, and he struck out four in five innings.

“Flande was outstanding,” Rockies manager Walt Weiss said. “I thought he was very good. Gonzales was outstanding the first time through the lineup. We got a few off him, but he hung in, gave his team a chance to win.”

Gonzales also pitched five innings. He allowed five runs and seven hits, and struck out three. He doubled and scored the Cardinals’ first run in the third inning.

“I have no idea how I hit that pitch,” he said. “It was a pretty good slider.”

— Associated Press —

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