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Missouri Western’s Degner named 3rd Team All-American

MWSUMissouri Western junior outfielder Ryan Degner has been named Third Team All-American by Rawlings/American Baseball Coaches Association which was released on Tuesday afternoon.

Degner led the Griffons in almost all offensive categories hitting a team high .383 and finishing the season the season getting a hit in 11 of his last 12 games. He led the team in hits (74), runs scored (46), doubles (16), total bases (124), slugging percentage (.642), on base percentage (.448), stolen bases (19) and RBI (49). He was second on the team with 10 home runs and had a hit in 41 of the Griffons 52 games this season which includes getting four hits in a game three times. He had a season best six RBI against the Northeastern State RiverHawks. He was also named to the second team All-MIAA and first team All-Central Region.

The Griffons finished the season 32-20 overall and 24-14 in the MIAA. They made it to the MIAA Tournament Championship game for the second straight season.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Battle at the Ballpark 2 coming to Phil Welch June 13th

Rob Merritt (left) & John Carden talk about "Battle at the Ballpark 2"
Rob Merritt (left) & John Carden talk about “Battle at the Ballpark 2”
Ashleigh Curry (left) & Melisenda Perez will fight for the Mid-American Women’s lightweight championship on June 13th.
Ashleigh Curry (left) & Melisenda Perez will fight for the Mid-American Women’s lightweight championship on June 13th.

Legacy Boxing promoter John Carden and Matchmaker Rob Merritt, along with the St. Joseph Mustangs baseball club bring live professional boxing back to historic Phil Welch Stadium as “Battle at the Ballpark 2” will take place Friday, June 13.

This year’s event will be the biggest pro boxing show ever in the state of Missouri as 18 bouts are scheduled, breaking the old record held by legendary boxing promoter Don King, who had a 15 bout show in St. Louis in 2005.

Battle at the Ballpark 2 will feature two World Class title fights.

Olanrewaju Duradola, a 2008 Nigerian Olympian, is currently ranked sixth in the world by the WBC and he will battle Max Hayman of Albuquerque, New Mexico, for the WBC Continental America’s Cruiserweight belt.

The other title fight will be for the Mid-American Women’s lightweight championship.  Former Missouri Western basketball player Ashleigh Curry will take on the 20th ranked boxing in the world, Melisenda Perez of Kansas City.

The ballpark gates will open at 5:00 p.m. and the first bout will begin at 6:30 p.m.

The undercard will feature Jason Redmond, Marcus Garza and other local boxers that include Bryan Timmons, Anthony Ferry, Tyler Seever, Colby Courter, Bryan Dailey, Emmit Wood and Galen Brown.

Tickets prices are: $20 general admission, $30 reserved box, $40 on-field table seating and $50 ringside.  Tickets are available at the Mustangs box office or by calling (816) 279-7856.  Or by calling Legacy Boxing at (816) 383-2103 or (816) 294-4143.

— Legacy Boxing Press Release —

Griffon women sign former Junior College All-American

MWSULaQuinta Jefferson, a finalist for the 2012 WBCA National Junior College Player of the Year Award, will transfer from Jefferson (Mo.) College to MWSU, head women’s basketball coach Rob Edmisson announced on Tuesday. She join junior college transfers Miliakere (Mili) Koyamainavure of Suva, Fiji (Iowa Central CC), Mhykeah Baez of San Marcos, Texas (College of Central Florida), Chelsea Dewey of Gower, Mo. (Hutchinson CC), Sarafina Handy of Flossmoor, Ill. (Kankakee CC) and Mariah Jordan of Gary, Ind. (Pensacola State) along with freshman Olivia Hanson of Fort Smith, Ark. (Northside HS) and Anna Rogers of Greenland, Ark. (Greenland HS) to next year’s squad.

Jefferson, a 5-foot-11 wing, had originally signed with LSU in the summer of 2012. She will have two years of remaining eligibility when she joins the Griffons. She also signed with the University of Kentucky out of high school.

“We are excited to round out our 2014 recruiting class with Jefferson,” said Edmisson. “We believe she will, along with our previous signees add to the future success of our program. We are excited to have her in the Missouri Western family!”

Jefferson, a native of La Vergne, Tenn., averaged a team-high 17.6 points, 6.4 rebounds, 3.2 assists and 2.9 steals per game for Jefferson College as a sophomore. She led the Lady Vikings to a 31-5 overall record, an appearance at the National Junior College Tournament, and a No. 7 national ranking.

Jefferson combined for 48 points in two games at the Region 16 tournament. She received NJCAA All-Tournament Team honors and earned a spot on the Women’s Basketball Coaches’ Association Junior College All-America team. Jefferson was one of three finalists for the WBCA National Junior College Player of the Year. She scored 38 points to clinch a berth for the Lady Vikings in the NJCAA National Tournament.

Jefferson, a three-year starter at La Vergne High School, was ranked the No. 64 high school prospect in America for the Class of 2010 by ESPN Hoop Gurlz. As a junior she put up 17.4 points per game and helped lead La Vergne High School to a 22-9 overall record. Jefferson was a three-time selection to the Daily News Journal’s All-area team and she was a 2009 Tennessee Sports Writers’ Association All-State recipient.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Royals drop third straight as they get blanked by Houston

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Watching from the bullpen as journeyman Collin McHugh carved up the Kansas City lineup, Astros reliever Tony Sipp only wished he had a bucket of popcorn and a soda.

“It’s like watching a good movie,” Sipp said, “and you don’t want to mess up the ending.”

After McHugh held the light-hitting Royals at bay over seven innings, Sipp and Chad Qualls provided an appropriate ending. They worked the final two innings without allowing a hit in a 3-0 victory Tuesday night that gave Houston its first four-game winning streak since September.

The Astros own the worst record in the AL, but have won four in a row on the road for the first time since taking six straight away from Minute Maid Park last May 29-June 3.

“I mean, I think we’re playing hard,” said McHugh, who is already on his third big league team in three seasons. “We’re coming to play every day, and we’re putting together a few games here.”

Houston rookie George Springer’s homer streak ended at four games. He hit two flyballs to the warning track and finished 1 for 4. Matt Dominguez hit an RBI single in the fourth, and the Astros tacked on two more runs against Tim Collins in the eighth.

“That’s what you call an extremely well-played baseball game,” Houston manager Bo Porter said.

McHugh (3-3) scattered five hits while striking out nine without issuing a walk to earn his first win in five starts. He stranded a runner at third base in the second inning and runners at second and third in the fifth, but otherwise cruised through the Kansas City lineup.

The only run Jeremy Guthrie (2-4) allowed came when Dominguez followed up a pair of one-out walks to Dexter Fowler and Jason Castro with a single in the fourth inning.

Guthrie left after allowing seven hits and three walks in six innings. The right-hander dodged plenty of trouble, inducing double-play grounders in the third and fifth, but still got stuck with his fourth straight loss. His last win came April 9 against Tampa Bay.

During a nine-start winless streak, Guthrie has allowed just one run on three occasions.

The Royals lost for the sixth time in their last eight games, and their pop-gun offense has had a lot to do with the futility. Kansas City has been held to three or fewer runs in four of its last five games, including the 9-2 pounding that Houston dished out on Monday night.

Royals manager Ned Yost’s frustration boiled over in the sixth inning. He went out to check on Guthrie with the bases loaded and two outs, and was returning to the dugout after their discussion when plate umpire Kerwin Danley met him near the mound.

After saying something to Danley, Yost was immediately ejected.

“I got frustrated on some calls I thought Jeremy should have got. It’s mostly my fault,” said Yost, who was tossed for the second time this season.

Meanwhile, McHugh continued to slice up the Royals’ batting order. He struck out designated hitter Billy Butler twice, silenced Eric Hosmer’s bat and retired the last eight hitters he faced.

It was the fourth time the Royals have been shut out this season.

“You don’t lose confidence, but you’re definitely frustrated,” Hosmer said. “We definitely should be putting up a better fight. As an offense as a whole, we should be putting up a better performance than that. We’re not getting the job done.”

— Associated Press —

Kansas State finally grants Leticia Romero release

AP KANSAS ST BAYLOR BASKETBALL S BKW T25 USA TXKansas State granted a release to women’s basketball player Leticia Romero on Tuesday after amending its transfer policy, ending an embarrassing spat that had generated national attention.

Romero will be allowed to transfer to any school outside the Big 12 after the K-State Athletics Board of Directors approved the policy change.

Romero, who led the Wildcats in scoring as a freshman, had been seeking to transfer after coach Deb Patterson was fired. The school denied her request amid concerns that members of the previous staff were trying to persuade her to follow them to another school.

An appeals committee upheld the decision, and pundits ranging from Dick Vitale to fellow college basketball analyst Jay Bilas took to Twitter in Romero’s support.

Making the situation even more embarrassing was the fact that Kansas State president Kirk Schulz is a member of the NCAA executive committee, which has come under fire in recent years for a range of issues that include the policies governing when and where athletes may transfer.

In a letter to Schulz, Kansas State athletic director John Currie recommended on Monday the change to the school’s transfer policy. The resulting provision gives the athletic director power to retract a denial of a release if new information becomes available.

The policy change came less than a week after a separate, confidential letter from Currie to university administrator Pat Bosco surfaced. In it, Currie said he had spoken at length with Romero about tampering concerns and “she was direct that this was not the case.” Romero also told him that she would not be transferring to Northern Colorado, the school where Patterson and former assistants Kamie Ethridge, Kelly Moylan and Shalee Lehning had been hired.

Kansas State proved to be inflexible, though. In a statement last Wednesday, school vice president Jeffrey Morris maintained the appeals committee’s ruling was “final and binding, and there is no university procedure to re-examine one of those decisions.”

Romero had retained Alabama attorney Donald Jackson to represent her in the case.

Kansas State’s policy states that “except for the most compelling of circumstances, which place an undue burden on the student athlete, it is the policy of the department of intercollegiate athletics not to grant a release for the purposes of a transfer.”

Yet, just in the last few years, Kansas State has approved multiple transfers. Point guard Angel Rodriguez secured his release prior to last season and wound up at Miami, while quarterback Daniel Sams secured a release to transfer closer to his home in Louisiana.

Until she was granted a release, Romero was barred from receiving a scholarship at another Division I university for a year and prohibited from having any contact with another coach. Now, she will be able to receive financial aid immediately, though she will still have to sit out a season under NCAA transfer guidelines if she ends up at another Division I school.

— Associated Press —

Cards blank Yanks as Lance Lynn tosses first career complete game

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Lance Lynn lobbied for nine more pitches. One base runner, St. Louis Cardinals manager Mike Matheny told the right-hander, and we go to the bullpen.

Lynn needed exactly nine pitches to finish a five-hit shutout in his first career complete game, a 6-0 victory over the New York Yankees on Tuesday night.

“It was definitely one to remember,” Lynn said. “To do it against the Yankees is exciting, especially if it’s your first one as a professional.”

Lynn made 72 starts over three-plus seasons in the minors without going the distance, blaming ultra-vigilant pitch counters that never allowed anyone not named Maddux or Wainwright to throw more than 100 a game.

He is the seventh pitcher in franchise history to win 40 games before making a 100th career appearance, and topped his previous best of eight innings while baffling Yankees hitters with a sinker combined with a breaking pitch that Matheny thought was the best he’s seen this season.

`It’s very hard to see pitchers we’ve never seen before,” Yankees outfielder Alfonso Soriano said after going 0 for 4. “I know him, I played in the National League against him, but you have to give a lot of credit to him.

“The guy had command and that’s why he threw nine innings.”

Lynn struck out all four at-bats but the Cardinals had plenty of offense with homers by Allen Craig and Matt Holliday. Holliday and Matt Adams had three hits and an RBI apiece and Craig drove in two runs.

Holliday’s third homer of the season ended a 24-game drought. He had 22 homers last year.

“You play this game long enough, you’re going to have a period of time where things, you don’t get what you want,” Holliday said. “I don’t want to look back on the past, it’s all about what I’m doing now and the rest of the season.”

The Cardinals have won 10 of 13, shaking off a 12-inning loss in the series’ opener, and ended the Yankees’ three-game road winning streak that matched their best of the year.

Manager Joe Girardi said fatigue was not a factor.

“This is baseball. I mean, this is what we train to do,” Girardi said. “It’s just part of the game. You have ups and downs.”

David Phelps (1-2) pitched in his hometown for the first time and allowed three earned runs in six innings. Two infield errors contributed to two unearned runs in the Cardinals’ breakout four-run third.

Derek Jeter of the Yankees got a standing ovation before each at-bat, just like in the opener. He was 0 for 3 with a walk.

Adams leads the National League with 22 multi-hit games, Holliday has reached safely in all 23 home games and Craig has a team-high 15 RBIs this month.

Lynn (6-2) struck out two and walked three, topping his previous best of eight innings on April 25, 2012, at Chicago against the Cubs. He retired the side in order three times and finished with 126 pitches and still feeling strong.

“Every time you go out, that’s what you try to do, not give up any runs and finish it,” Lynn said. “Today was the first time I was able to do that, so it took me way too long.”

The Yankees were shut out for just the second time, going 0 for 9 with runners in scoring position and stranding two runners twice. Lynn was the first pitcher to go the distance and shut them out since Tampa Bay’s Chris Archer on July 27, 2013.

The Cardinals batted around in the third with Adams’ double the lone run-producing hit. Craig reached on a bases-loaded RBI groundout when first baseman Kelly Johnson gloved an offline throw from Jeter but then lost the ball attempting a sweeping tag, and two runs scored on Jhonny Peralta’s grounder that scooted under second baseman Brian Roberts’ glove.

Craig’s fifth homer ticked off right fielder Alfonso Soriano’s glove at the wall in the fifth. Holliday greeted reliever Alfredo Aceves with his third of the season leading off the seventh.

The Yankees opened with a big play on defense, with center fielder Jacoby Ellsbury’s running grab steps from the wall to rob leadoff man Matt Carpenter of extra bases in the first.

Adams stretched to full extension keeping his foot on the bag at first on Roberts’ groundout to end the second. Rookie second baseman Kolten Wong made three nice plays, outrunning Ellsbury to first after fielding a grounder that Adams also chased, turning a smash by Yangervis Solarte into a double play ball in the fourth, and diving to snare Phelps’ foul pop-up in the fifth.

— Associated Press —

Mizzou/Arkansas football game moved to day after Thanksgiving

riggertMizzouMizzou Football’s final 2014 regular season game vs. Arkansas has been moved to Friday, Nov. 28, with a 1:30 p.m. CT nationally televised kickoff on CBS. The visit from the Southeastern Conference foe is the Razorbacks’ first trip to Columbia since the 1906 season.

The Friday matchup between Mizzou and Arkansas is the first non-Thanksgiving Saturday game scheduled for the Tigers since the 1954 season, when legendary head coach Don Faurot’s team played at Maryland on Thanksgiving (Thursday, Nov. 25, 1954). The last home non-Thanksgiving Saturday game was on Thanksgiving in 1950, when Faurot’s group defeated Kansas, 20-6, on Thursday, Nov. 23, 1950.

Most recently, the Tigers defeated Arkansas in impressive fashion in the 2008 Cotton Bowl by a score of 38-7 (Jan. 1, 2008). The win finished off an impressive 2007 season for Mizzou and head coach Gary Pinkel, posting the first 12-win season in school history and reaching No. 1 in the polls.

Mizzou’s full 2014 schedule can be found here, with ticket information available here. The season gets underway on Saturday, Aug. 30, vs. South Dakota State at Faurot Field (kickoff TBA).

— MU Sports Information —

MWSU tennis signs two international student-athletes

riggertMissouriWesternMissouri Western tennis coach Tom Smith has announced the signing of two international student-athletes for the 2015 season. Sarah Giraldo a junior college transfer from Cali, Columbia comes to Missouri Western from Cowley College in Arkansas City, Kan. while Yasmine El Ghazi from Oujda, Morocco comes to MWSU from Johnson County Community College in Overland Park, Kan.

Giraldo, a 5-9, junior college transfer from Cali, Colombia played her high school tennis at Colegio Jefferson HS in Cali, Colombia. She transfers to Missouri Western from Cowley College. This past season she helped her team to a 4th place finish at the NJCAA Division I National Tennis Championships held in Tyler, Texas. The forth place finish ties the accomplishments of the 2007 and 2010 teams. Giraldo made it to the consolation finals where she fell at No. 2 singles. She went 3-2 in singles competition at the National Tournament. In No. 3 doubles she and her partner fell in the semifinals. As a freshman she made an appearance at the Wilson/ITA Small College National Tournament where she was a quarterfianalist at the No. 3 doubles position. She is the daughter of Raul Giraldo and Maria Claudia Betancourt and plans on majoring in business marketing.

“Sarah has the length and athletic ability to become a very competitive two or three in our line up.” commented Coach Smith.

El Ghazi, a 5-6, transfer from Oujda, Morocco played her high school tennis at Zi Ri Ben Atia in Oujda, Morocco. She transfers from Johnson County CC. El Ghazi will have three years of eligibility at MWSU. As a freshman she earned a No. 31 ITA singles ranking making her the only women’s player on JCCC’s 2014 roster to earn a preseason national ranking. She is an extremely strong player with great athleticism. She has a strong forehand when her serve is on it is her greatest weapon. She is the daughter of Jalil and Islem and her brother Yassir playes tennis for Rockhurst Univeristy. She plans on majoring in accounting.

“Yasmine can step in at #1 or #2 and when she is healthy she can be very competitive,” said Smith. “She has a great serve and is very athletic.”

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bishop LeBlond defeats Carrollton 2-0 in Class 3 Sectional

BishopLeBlond2The Bishop LeBlond baseball team advanced to the Class 3 Quarterfinals with a 2-0 victory over Carrollton Monday in the Sectional at the Missouri Western Spring Sports Complex.

Trey Hartman threw a complete-game shutout to get the win as the Eagles improve to 16-7 this season.  LeBlond scored on an error and a Matthew McCullough RBI single.

It’s the first time since 1977 that the Eagles have advanced past the sectional round of the state playoffs.

Bishop LeBlond will travel to Westphalia Wednesday for a Quarterfinal matchup with defending state champion Fatima.

Mustangs announce 2014 St. Joseph Baseball Hall of Fame Class

riggertMustangsSt. Joseph’s longest-tenured major league baseball player and two groups that have made major contributions toward the St. Joseph Mustangs are the 2014 nominees to the Mustangs Hall of Fame.

Byron Browne, the Hometown Members of the Inaugural 2009 St. Joseph Mustangs, and the Diamond Club have been chosen for recognition.
Browne, originally drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates, spent eight years in the major leagues (1965-1972), playing for the Chicago Cubs, Houston Astros, St. Louis Cardinals and Philadelphia Phillies.

In his first major league at-bat, as a Cub, he lined out against Sandy Koufax, who went on to pitch a perfect game that day for the Los Angeles Dodgers. Among Browne’s 30 major league home runs one of the more memorable was hit against Bob Gibson, legendary St. Louis Cardinal pitcher. A multi-sport star at Central High School, Browne also served briefly as a volunteer baseball coach under Doug Minnis at Missouri Western.

Hometown Members of the Inaugural 2009 St. Joseph Mustangs being recognized are Johnny Coy, Ryan Hook, Drew Garwood, Landin Eckhart, Ethan Barnett and Jordan McGlaughlin.

“These young men could have played anywhere that summer, but they chose to stay in St. Joseph and play with the Mustangs,” said Dan Gerson, Mustangs president and chief executive officer.

“Their presence and their skills gave us instand credibility, and helped lay the foundation for what continues to be a successful organization. We’re extremely grateful for the contribution these young men made to the program here.”

The Diamond Club has been a strong supporter of summer baseball in St. Joseph since it was organized in 1996 by the late Jim and Donna Hamlin. Contributions to the Mustangs and to their summer predecessors have included building and painting booths, taking tickets, serving as ushers and lending support to the team at games both home and away.

Francis (Bud) Fisch is the president of the Diamond Club. Others who continue to play major roles include Jeannie Tudor, David Johnson, and George Brumback.

The new members of the Hall of Fame join Dave Brown, a professional baseball player who managed the 1972 St. Joseph team that won the Boys Baseball Bronco World Series; Linden Black and Mr. Hamlin, catalysts in bringing summer baseball back to St. Joseph; Julius Hochman, founder of the Boys Baseball program in St. Joseph; Doug Minnis, longtime coach at Missouri Western; the 1975 Missouri Western baseball team that played in the NAIA World Series; longtime baseball coaches Greg Kastner (Bishop LeBlond) and Mike Musser (Benton) and the late Tony Poloski, a professional baseball scout who was heavily involved in St. Joseph baseball programs.

— Mustangs Press Release —

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