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Mustangs’ games get postponed again Monday

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs had another doubleheader postponed because of rain.  One day after their two games were called at Ozark Sunday, St. Joseph’s twin bill Monday against the Branson Nationals in Bolivar was also postponed.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team sits at 9-3 this season and 4-3 in MINK League play as they’ve won three consecutive games after dropping three of four.

The two games with Branson will be made up in St. Joseph as they will now play doubleheaders with the Nationals on June 20th and July 11th.  Branson was originally scheduled for single games on each of those days.

The Mustangs are back in action Tuesday as they play at Omaha (3-4).  The first pitch has been moved from 7:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m.

Northwest men’s basketball adds four to 2014-15 recruiting class

Northwest2013riggertNorthwest Missouri State head men’s basketball coach Ben McCollum has announced the addition of four student-athletes to the 2014-15 roster.

The latest additions to the 2014-15 roster are Larry Fitzgerald (Milwaukee, Wisc.), Kyle Harrison (Overland Park, Kan.), Jared White (Desoto, Mo.) and Anthony Woods(Kansas City, Mo.). These four additions will join Vance Wentz (Leadwood, Kan.), Xavier Kurth (St. Joseph, Mo.) and Dray Starzl (Kearney, Mo.) who all signed with the Bearcats earlier this year.

“We are very excited about our class as a whole,” We continue to recruit high character kids and I feel we have done that with this class,” McCollum said. “I believe our teachers, fellow students, staff and fans will enjoy being around this group of young men. We will have a lot of work to do getting eight new guysacclimated with our program.”

Fitzgerald played the past two seasons at Butler County Community College. Last season, he started 31 games, averaging 11.9 points per game and 4.6 rebounds per game. He also hit 41.5 percent (39-for-94) of his three point attempts. As a prep, Fitzgerald was a two time all-state and a three time all-league performer for Milwaukee Pius XI. He surpassed 1,000 career points during his senior season and was a participant in the Wisconsin WBCA All-Star game.

“Larry is a solid three-point shooter and has the chance to be a great offensive rebounder at our level,” said McCollum.” He plays extremely hard and we were very impressed with his energy and ability to communicate on the floor. He wants to win and will do whatever it takes to make his team better.”

Harrison helped Blue Valley Northwest to two state basketball championships, earning all-state honorable mention. He received All-EKL first team honors two years in a row. Harrison holds the record for all time career three-point field goals at Blue Valley Northwest. Harrison was also a first team all-state performer in football.

“Kyle is a competitor who is coming off back to back state titles in the largest class in Kansas,” said McCollum. “He is a very good shooter and has a very good feel for the game. Kyle adds to our freshman depth and we look forward to watching him grow.”

White was an all-region performer for coach Gene Bess at Three Rivers Community College. White graduated from Desoto High School where he received two all-state honors and four all-region honors. He was named conference MVP twice. He was a standout in football where he received all-state, all-conference, all-region and all-district honors during his career. Whitebegan his playing career at Division I Southeast Missouri State University.

“Jared is a tough and physical guard,” McCollum said. “His strength and athleticism makes him a tough match up. He can get to the basket and uses his strength to finish well around the basket. He comes from an athletic family and is extremely competitive.”

Woods appeared in 26 games last year during his only season at Northeast Community College in Norfolk, Neb. He had four double-digit scoring contests as a senior. The point guard had a season-high 12 assists against Indian Hills CC on Jan. 29, 2014. Wood was an all-state performer and Suburban Conference MVP for Park Hill South High School. He was also named to the Missouri All-Starteam and was a first team all-conference selection.

“Anthony is very long and passes the ball extremely well,” McCollum said. “He has a chance to turn into a great defender with his length. His unselfishness and ability to make the right play jumped out at us when watching him play. He will have three years of eligibility after spending one year at Northeast CC.”

— Northwest Sports Information —

Royals-Yankees finale postponed because of rain

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The fact that the Royals seemed to be finally hitting their stride was not lost on manager Ned Yost as he left his office, ambled down the tunnel and peered out into the rain on Monday.

“When you’re playing well,” he said, “you don’t like rainouts.”

Still, Yost acknowledged that there were benefits to having the game against the New York Yankees postponed, a decision made about two hours before the scheduled first pitch. He was already planning to rest catcher Salvador Perez, and guys such as Omar Infante who have been scuffling will also get the day off.

“There are pros and cons to it,” Yost said.

The game will be made up Aug. 25 at a time to be determined.

Yost said he plans to slide his rotation back one day. Left-hander Jason Vargas, who was supposed to finish up the four-game series against New York, will now start the opener of a two-game set Tuesday against Cleveland. Right-hander Yordano Ventura is on the mound Wednesday.

The Royals are off on Thursday, giving everyone another chance to rest.

Meanwhile, Yankees ace Masahiro Tanaka flew ahead to Seattle in anticipation of starting Tuesday, but manager Joe Girardi also plans to push his rotation back a day. That means left-hander Vidal Nuno will start the opener against the Mariners and Tanaka will pitch Wednesday.

There have been signs the last couple weeks that Kansas City is starting to come out of its early season funk, though, and that resurgence has roughly coincided with some changes to the coaching staff when the team was in Toronto. Pedro Grifol was removed as the hitting coach and the job given to Dale Sveum, who once helped to tutor Milwaukee’s young power hitters.

“They’ve done a better job with their approach, getting pitches up, putting good swings on them. When you have a team you believe in there’s a point where it’s going to click somewhere,” Yost said. “Maybe it clicked in Toronto, I don’t know.”

Since leaving Toronto, the Royals have won five of their last seven games. Twice they’ve piled up eight runs, which matched the third-most they’ve scored in any game all season.

That’s the kind of turnaround the Yankees would like to see.

The Bronx Bombers will be taking their slingshot offense to Seattle and Oakland to continue what has already been a disappointing trip. The Yankees won the opener against Kansas City 4-2, but then struggled again to score runs in an 8-4 loss on Saturday and a 2-1 defeat Sunday.

“The one thing you can’t do is you can’t necessarily change everything,” Yankees manager Jo Girardi said. “You look at what guys have done in the past, you look at what guys are doing this year, and you try to piece together what you feel is the best lineup every day.

“We’ve struggled the last three or four weeks scoring runs. We know we need to score more,” he continued, “but guys are going through a time. You just have to ride it out a little bit.”

The Yankees, in the bottom half of the league in several offensive categories, have failed to score more than four runs each of their past 10 games, winning just three times in that stretch.

“You are usually not as bad as you look when things are going bad,” said Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter, who was 0 for 4 on Sunday. “It’s like you’re usually not as good as you look when things are going good. But we’ve got to turn it around.”

— Associated Press —

Bearcat volleyball signs five more to recruiting class

Northwest2013riggertNorthwest Missouri State volleyball head coach Amy Woerthhas announced the additions of five student-athletes to the 2014 roster.

The latest additions to the 2014 recruiting class include Danielle Rubow (Chanute, Kan.), Gabby Torline (Wichita, Kan.), Darcy Sunderman (Clarinda, Iowa), Megan Stilmock (Omaha, Neb.) and Jordan Trimble (Platte County, Mo.). These five additions join Alexis Williams (Blue Springs, Mo.), Bristol Lewis (Stilwell, Kan.) and Sarah Dannettell (Windsor, Colo.), who signed with the Bearcats in November.

Rubow was a two-year starter for Lindsay Hill at Fort Scott Community College as a middle blocker. She started all 35 matches for the Greyhounds last season, recording 97 blocks and 112 kills. She was a three-sport athlete at ChanuteSenior High School, lettering in volleyball, basketball and softball. She played for FS Juniors club.

“Dani also brings in two years of college playing experience which will help strengthen our middle hitter depth,” Woerth said. “She has been well trained and will bring speed and athleticism to our team.”

Torline was a four-year standout for Kapaun Mt. Carmel in Wichita, Kan., under head coach Terri Hessman. She earned all-state honorable mention honors and was an All-Greater Wichita Athletic League performer. She was also a first-teamall-academic team member all four seasons. She played club for the ICT Mavs and coach Destiny Clark.

“Gabby’s strengths are her athleticism, platform and defensive skills,” said Woerth. “She loves to work hard. She has high level club experience which will help her quickly transition to the Division II college game.”

Stilmock, a setter, was an honorable mention all-state performer for coach Kim Brehm at Ralston High School in Omaha, Neb. She earned honorable mention All-River City Conference honors all four seasons and is the school record holder forsets in a career and sets during a match. She played club for the River City Juniors and was coached by Deb Grafentin.

“Megan is a smart and quick setter that will add depth in our setting position,” said Woerth. “I’m excited to see her development and I think she has potential to run an efficient offense with our squad.”

Sunderman played outside hitter and middle for Clarinda High School and coach Jessica Lewey. She was a four-time All-Hawkeye Ten Conference selection and was the Southwest Iowa Player of the Year three times. She was named to the all-state tournament team all four years and was also on the national volleyball all-tournament team in 2011. As a senior, she was in the Iowa Girls’ Senior All-Star Classic. She played club for River City Juniors and coach Deb Grafentin. Sunderman lettered in volleyball, basketball, track and softball.

“I’m looking forward to see Darcy develop in her career at Northwest,” Worth commented. “She has great athletic potential and with experience she will become a competitive threat. She will also add versatility to our team with experience playing multiple positions.”

Trimble was an academic all-conference performer for coach Delice Downing at Coffeyville Community College the past two seasons. She served as team captain both years and averaged 7.3 assists per set as a sophomore last season. Trimble was a three-sport standout at Platte County High School in Platte County, Mo., earning all-conference accolades in soccer, basketball and volleyball. She was an all-district and all-regional performer in volleyball as well, earning academic all-state honors while being named to the Missouri/Kansas Small Class All Star Team. She was a member of National Honor Society.

“Bringing in two years of collegiate setting experience, Jordan will use her strong leadership and defensive skills to fight for court time,” explained Woerth. “She does a great job running an offense that can keep the defense off balance.”

— Northwest Sports Information —

Three current or former Mustangs selected in MLB Draft

riggertMustangsThree players with St. Joseph Mustangs ties were selected in the 2014 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft over the weekend.

Current Mustangs’ infielder Nate Winfrey was selected with the 848th pick in the 28th round by the Cleveland Indians.  Winfrey, a freshman from Maple Woods Community College, played in nine games for St. Joseph this summer.  Winfrey batted .211 with a double, three RBIs, and eleven walks.

Former Mustangs’ pitcher Bubba Blau was taken in the 24th round (716th overall) by the Milwaukee Brewers. In 2014 with Dixie State, Blau went 1-1 with a 2.92 ERA in 16 relief appearances.

And former St. Joseph outfielder Griff Gordon was selected with the 812th pick in the 27th round by the New York Yankees. Gordon played for Jacksonville State this season and led the Gamecocks with a .380 average.  He also had seven home runs, 50 RBI and 55 runs scored.

Royals win second straight against Yankees, 2-1

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — James Shields would have been wise to pop some Dramamine, Ned Yost some antacids.

The Royals’ ace survived six shaky innings mostly of his own doing Sunday, and the Kansas City offense supplied just enough offense against Hiroki Kuroda to squeak out a 2-1 victory.

“Shields had to grind it out again and again,” said Yost, his manager, who spent the entire game on edge, “and he made it through some choppy waters.”

Even without any motion-sickness medicine.

The Royals have won the last seven games that Shields (7-3) has started, and he’s earned the win in four of those. The veteran right-hander may have lasted only six innings in this effort, but he gave up only six hits to the punchless Yankees and allowed one unearned run.

“They’re always tough,” said Shields, who faced the Yankees for the 30th time, more than any other club. “They make good at-bats. It’s always a grind whenever you face them.”

Aaron Crow escaped a jam in the seventh inning, and Wade Davis recorded the 500th strikeout of his career during a perfect eighth before Greg Holland survived a shaky ninth for his 18th save.

The All-Star closer gave up a leadoff single to Ichiro Suzuki and then sent him to second on a wild pitch. Holland kept his cool, retiring Brian Roberts on a fly out, pinch hitter Mark Teixeira on a groundout and then striking out Brett Gardner to end the game.

“Shields battled his butt off,” Crow said. “You want to make sure he gets the win.”

The Yankees failed to score more than four runs for the 10th consecutive game, though the not-so-aptly-named “Bronx Bombers” certainly had their share of chances.

Not just in the ninth inning, either.

New York stranded runners on first and second in the first inning. It loaded the bases with nobody out in the second and failed to score. Jacoby Ellsbury led off the third with a double and was left on third base. And Roberts was stranded after a fourth-inning double.

“Somehow we’ve got to find a way to get it done,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said.

In all, 10 of the first 12 outs Shields recorded were with runners in scoring position. The Yankees finished 1 for 17 with runners in scoring position.

“It was a game of missed opportunities,” Derek Jeter said. “We had a lot of opportunities. Gives those guys credit. We’ve seen Shields for years now and he’s as good as they come, especially with guys on base. He bears down.”

While the Yankees were struggling to find a clutch hit, the Royals managed to string together the only real success they had against Kuroda (4-4) with two outs in the second inning.

Hot-hitting Salvador Perez, who cracked a three-run homer in an 8-4 win Saturday night, got things going with a single. Cain’s base hit drove in the first run and Moustakas, in the throes of another major slump, added another single to make the score 2-0.

That was all the Royals could muster against Kuroda, who had been unbeaten in his last six starts. He allowed five hits and two walks while striking out three in seven innings.

New York finally scored in the sixth, when Yangervis Solarte hit a double and reached third base on a passed ball. Suzuki drove him in with a groundout to shortstop.

But given a chance to tie the game, the Yankees kept coming up empty.

Their failure in the ninth inning came after Gardner sent a triple to the wall with one out in the seventh. Crow rebounded to get Jeter on a ground out, and then struck out Ellsbury with a full-count pitch to leave the tying run 90 feet away.

“When guys are scuffling it seems like they are scuffling in bunches. When you get hot it seems like a lot of guys are hot,” Jeter said. “These are the times you’ve got to keep swinging. The only way to get out of it is swing out of it.”

— Associated Press —

St. Joseph’s doubleheader at Ozark postponed Sunday

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs had their doubleheader at Ozark postponed Sunday evening because of rain.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team sits at 9-3 this season and 4-3 in MINK League play as they’ve won three consecutive games after dropping three of four.

The Mustangs are back in action Monday afternoon as they play a doubleheader against the newest MINK League team, the Branson Nationals.

The Nationals, who are 2-4 this season, are playing their home games in Bolivar at Southwest Baptist University.

The first pitch of game one Monday is set for 2:00 p.m.

St. Louis blanks Blue Jays again behind combined three-hitter

CardsTORONTO (AP) — Jaime Garcia and two relievers combined on a three-hitter, Matt Carpenter and Jhonny Peralta homered, and the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Toronto Blue Jays 5-0 on Sunday.

Garcia (2-0) allowed three hits in seven innings, walked three and struck out four to win for the first time in three starts.

Pat Neshek worked the eighth and Trevor Rosenthal finished for the Cardinals, who have a Major League-high 12 shutouts this season. Texas entered Sunday with 11.

St. Louis won back-to-back games for the first time since May 24 and 25 against Cincinnati.

The AL East-leading Blue Jays, who had been blanked just once this season before Saturday, went scoreless for the second straight game and matched their season-low with three hits. Shelby Miller pitched a three-hitter to beat the Blue Jays 5-0 on Saturday.

Toronto lost consecutive games for the first time since May 29-30 against Kansas City. They haven’t lost three straight since dropping the first three of a four-game home series against the Angels from May 9-11. The Blue Jays had won seven series since.

The Cardinals opened the scoring with a four-run, bat-around second against Blue Jays right-hander Drew Hutchison. Peter Bourjos hit a sacrifice fly, Tony Cruz had an RBI double and Carpenter followed with a two-run homer, his first since April 4.

Peralta made it 5-0 when he led off the third with a drive to left, his team-leading 10th.

Hutchison (4-4) allowed five runs and six hits in three innings, his shortest start of the season. He walked one and struck out one.

Hutchison is 1/3 with an 8.72 ERA in five home starts and 3-1 with a 2.03 ERA in eight road starts.

Garcia had not walked a batter in four previous starts this season, but issued a pair in the first inning, with Melky Cabrera and Edwin Encarnacion both drawing free passes. Garcia struck out Brett Lawrie to strand both runners.

An infield single by Jose Reyes, a passed ball and a fielding error by Carpenter gave the Blue Jays runners at the corners with two outs in the fifth, but Garcia struck out Jose Bautista swinging.

Cardinals DH Matt Holliday was scratched from the lineup with a sore lower back and replaced by Yadier Molina.

— Associated Press —

St. Joseph needs just two hits to defeat Joplin, 5-2

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs won their third consecutive game Saturday night as they defeated Joplin, 5-2, inside Phil Welch Stadium.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team improves to 9-3 overall and 4-3 in MINK League play.

The Mustangs won the game with just two hits on Saturday as they took advantage of Joplin’s mistakes.  The Outlaws committed two errors, walked four batters and had two wild pitches.

St. Joseph scored single runs in the first two innings to grab an early lead.  Ryan Abernathy reached on an error in the first and scored on a wild pitch.

Then Zac Johnson singled to lead off the second inning and scored on an RBI groundout by Francisco Alvarez.

Joplin scored one run in the sixth before the Mustangs scored three in the bottom half of the sixth to get seperation from the Outlaws.

Abernathy scored on an error, Mike Sherburne came home on an RBI groundout by Andrew Standifer and Joe Koerper scored on another wild pitch.

Brandon Baker earned the win for St. Joe as he went went seven innings, allowing just four htis and one run. Baker is now 1-1 as he struck out six and walked one.

The Mustangs are back in action Sunday as they play a doubleheader at Ozark.  The first pitch of game one is set for 5:00 p.m.

Perez hits 3-run HR to lead Kansas City past Yankees

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Whenever a Royals pitcher has issued a walk lately, the runner has usually scored. So when Ned Yost’s own guys worked a pair of walks against the Yankees on Saturday night in the sixth inning of a tied game, the often-dour manager had an optimistic thought.

“Let’s turn it around this time,” Yost said.

Salvador Perez did just that.

The big catcher belted a three-run homer into the bullpen in left field, and Eric Hosmer added a solo shot later in the game, sending Kansas City to an 8-4 victory over New York.

“I’ve said all along, I thought we have home-run power,” said Yost, whose team has hit just 26 homers — by far the fewest in the majors. “It’ll manifest itself in time.”

Alex Gordon, Lorenzo Cain, Alcides Escobar and Nori Aoki drove in a run apiece as the Royals bounced back from an offensively inept performance in a 4-2 series-opening loss Friday night.

Aaron Crow (3-1) retired one batter in the sixth in relief of starter Danny Duffy, and breezed through the seventh to earn the victory. Kelvin Herrera and Michael Mariot finished it off.

David Phelps (1-4) allowed seven runs on 10 hits and two walks in 5⅔ innings.

“Frustrating is the PG-rated word for it,” he said. “I was pitching decent going into later parts of games, but it’s tough to win ballgames when you give up four runs in the sixth and seventh inning. It’s frustrating.”

Yangervis Solarte drove in a pair of runs for New York, and Carlos Beltran — who’s been bothered by an ailing elbow and is still relegated to designated hitter duty — got an RBI with his first hit since coming off the disabled list Thursday.

“It’s like starting over for me,” Beltran said. “One day, two days is not going to do it, any difference. Basically you have to play every day and with playing time that will come. I cannot tell you [when]. I wish I could know.”

The Royals struck first when Billy Butler and Gordon led off the second inning with back-to-back doubles, and Cain and Escobar provided run-scoring singles for a 3-0 lead.

It took the Yankees until the sixth to answer.

Derek Jeter started the rally with a single and Mark Teixeira kept it going with a two-out walk. Beltran followed with an RBI double against his former team, and Solarte tied the game 3-all when his sinking liner to center field dropped just beyond Cain’s outstretched glove.

Duffy, who appeared bothered by lengthy waits for television breaks between innings, was eventually removed after allowing three runs on five hits and three walks in 5⅔ innings.

The Royals made sure to pick him up.

Butler and Gordon worked walks to start the bottom half of the sixth, earning Phelps a visit from Yankees pitching coach Larry Rothschild. It didn’t do any good. Two pitches later, Perez sent a no-doubt homer into the bullpen in left field to restore the Royals’ three-run lead.

“We needed that,” Perez said. “It’s not been easy, but it’s coming.”

Cain tripled later in the inning, and Aoki’s RBI single knocked Phelps from the game.

“We just scored three runs. That’s the worst kind of team error right there,” Phelps said. “To go out and we have all the momentum right there and in nine pitches gave it right back.”

It was another poor outing by the Yankees right-hander, who moved from the bullpen into the rotation last month. Phelps has lost four straight decisions, allowing 16 runs in the past three.

Hosmer’s homer leading off the seventh was his first since May 5, a span of 130 at-bats, and Brian Roberts tacked on a run off Mariot in the ninth inning that proved to be moot.

“You’ve got to keep battling back,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. “We’re still fighting.”

— Associated Press —

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