We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Royals avoid sweep with 3-1 win over Chicago

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jeremy Guthrie, Wade Davis and Greg Holland combined on a four-hitter and the Kansas City Royals rallied in the ninth inning to beat the Chicago White Sox 3-1 Wednesday night and avoid being swept in their three-game series.

The White Sox had scored 14 runs and hit five home runs in the first two games.

Guthrie, who is winless in seven starts since an April 9 victory over Tampa Bay, left after seven innings with the score 1-1. He gave up three hits, walked two and struck out two.

Wade Davis (3-1) struck out two in a flawless eighth and has tossed 10 scoreless innings in his last nine appearances. Greg Holland logged his 13th save in 14 chances, but not before giving up a single to Dayan Viciedo and walking Adam Dunn in the ninth.

The Royals snapped a 1-1 tie in the ninth when Nori Aoki scored on Billy Butler’s sacrifice fly. Aoki started the one-out rally with a bunt single on a two-strike count. He advanced to third on Alcides Escobar’s single. Eric Hosmer was walked intentionally to load the bases, and Aoki scored on Butler’s fly to right.

Danny Valencia then walked on five pitches, scoring Escobar with the second run of the inning.

Paul Konerko, who leads all active visiting players with 149 RBIs at Kauffman Stadium, singled to left in the second to score Alexei Ramirez for the Chicago’s run.

The Royals tied it in the third when Aoki’s groundball single to left scored Pedro Ciriaco.

The Royals wasted a chance to take the lead in the fourth when they loaded the bases with one out on singles by Butler, Valencia and Lorenzo Cain. Ciriaco, however, rolled the first pitch back to the mound and left-hander Jose Quintana started an inning ending double play.

Quintana (2-4) took the loss, charged with three runs on eight hits over 7 1/3 innings.

— Associated Press —

Former Mustang Lubach hits walk-off sac fly as Nebraska rallies past OSU in Big Ten Tourney

NUOmaha – Headed into the bottom of the ninth down by three runs, the No. 20 Nebraska baseball team (38-18) plated four runs in its final at-bat, capped by a walk-off sacrifice fly by Tanner Lubach, on its way to a 7-6 opening-round victory over the Ohio State Buckeyes (30-27) in front of one of the largest crowds in Big Ten Tournament history. The win sets up a 5 p.m. meeting tomorrow with the Michigan State Spartans, who opened the tournament with a 2-1 victory over Illinois.

The victory was the Huskers’ sixth walk-off of the season and marked the 14th time this season the Huskers have won a game when they trailed or were tied after the sixth inning.

After cutting OSU’s lead in half in the fifth with three runs, the Huskers didn’t have a base runner over the next three innings. With All-American closer Trace Dempsey on the mound in the ninth, freshman Ben Miller snapped the streak with a leadoff walk and was replaced on the bases by fellow freshman Quinn McGill. Dempsey then hit Steven Reveles and walked Ryan Boldt to load the bases with no out. With a right hander on the mound, Darin Erstad called on lefty Christian Cox to pinch hit and the junior worked a full count, but struck out for the first out of the inning. Michael Pritchard was up next and worked a four-pitch walk to force home NU’s first run of the inning. With clean-up hitter Pat Kelly due up and the tying run at second base, the Buckeyes turned the ball over to Tyler Giannonatti. Kelly, who was named first-team All-Big Ten for the second straight season on Monday, came through with a two-RBI game-tying single, his third hit of the day. The Buckeyes then intentionally walked Blake Headley to load the bases and setup a potential double-play ball, but the game was not meant for extra innings as Lubach lifted a 1-0 offering from Giannonatti into shallow center field and Pritchard beat a throw home by Troy Montgomery to complete the Husker comeback.

The improbable comeback marked the fourth time this season the Huskers have defeated the Buckeyes in their final at-bat of the game.

Kelly was 3-for-5 with three RBIs to lead the Huskers, while Pritchard chipped in a pair of RBIs without getting a hit. Kelly leads the Huskers with 21 multi-hit games and 16 multi-RBI games on the year.

The ninth-inning rally wouldn’t have been possible without the work of Nebraska’s bullpen. Following OSU’s six-run fourth inning, three Husker relievers combined to allow just one hit over 5.0 scoreless innings. Luke Bublitz tossed a scoreless fifth before Jeff Chesnut and Austin Christensen each threw 2.0 innings of relief, including a pair of perfect innings from Christensen, who earned the win to improve to 3-0 on the year.

After the teams combined to score no runs on four hits through the first three innings, the Buckeyes broke the game open in the top of the fourth. OSU sent 11 batters to the plate and scored six runs on six hits. Aaron Gretz got the scoring started when he dropped a base-loaded double on the left-field line that scored two runs. The Buckeyes then executed a squeeze bunt and NU starter Chance Sinclair saw his day come to an end after Gretz scored on a wild pitch. Bob Greco took the mound and gave up three straight singles that scored a pair of runs before getting Pat Porter to bounced into an inning-ending fielder’s choice.

The Huskers cut OSU’s lead in half in the bottom of the fifth with three runs, starting with an RBI double by Jake Placzek. Pritchard then hit a dribbler out in front of the plate and OSU Tanner Tully tried to cut down Reveles at home, but the Husker shortstop slid under Gretz’s tag for the second run of the inning. Kelly kept the runs coming with an RBI single, before Tully got Headley to fly out for the second out of the inning. Tully, the 2014 Big Ten Freshman of the Year, then walked Lubach to load the bases, just his seventh walk of the season in 91.0 innings of work. With the tying runs on bases, Austin Darby stepped to the plate and was unable to keep the rally going with his third strikeout of the game.

Nebraska and Michigan State meet in Thursday’s winner bracket game at 5 p.m. on the Big Ten Network, with the winner getting Friday off and moving to Saturday’s 9 a.m. game against a team from the loser’s bracket.

— NU Sports Information —

Kansas adds highly touted Ukrainian prospect to recruiting class

KUSviatoslav Mykhailiuk, the youngest member of Kansas men’s basketball class of 2014, has signed a National Letter of Intent to become a Jayhawk, KU head coach Bill Self announced Wednesday.

A native of Cherkasy, Ukraine, Mykhailiuk is a dynamic 6-8, 195-pound shooting guard/small forward. The 16-year old will be eligible to play in the upcoming 2014-15 season. He will turn 17 in June, but already completed high school in the Ukraine, which would keep him in the college ranks for a minimum of two years due to the NBA Draft age requirement rules.

“Obviously, this is great news for us,” Self said. “He is 16 years old and will turn 17 in June, but his skill level, knowledge and aptitude for the game are way beyond his years. I think that he will be an immediate impact guy. He is a guy that can play all three positions on the perimeter. At 6-8, he can play point, play the No. 2 (guard) or the No. 3 (guard). He allows us to be more versatile next year and certainly, there would be few people that would shoot it better than him.”

Mykhailiuk shined while representing the Ukraine at the 2013 U16 European Championship, being named to the All-Tournament Team after averaging 25.2 points per game and eight rebounds. According to NBADraft.net, the young sharpshooter shows a mix of athleticism, skills and feel for the game that is extremely rare to see in a European player.

Self, who became aware of the Ukrainian talent three months ago, credited his development through his club team – the Cherkasy Mavpy – to be one of the most appealing factors in KU’s recruitment, citing that Mykhailiuk will begin his college career very skilled, drilled and prepared.

“We got a lot better today,” Self continued. “He’s not here yet and he won’t come until the fall because he’s going to stay back and play with his national team this summer, which we strongly encourage. He’s a young man who will be so exciting to watch his growth because of his age, his intellect and his ‘want to.’ This guy really wants to be a player and really wants to do it here in the States.”

The son of mom, Inna, a high school biology teacher and dad, Iurri, a college history professor, Mykhailiuk has taken English classes for much of his life and will come to Kansas this fall with a fairly strong grasp of the language.

“I liked everything,” Mykhailiuk said. “From the history, the strength program and especially the coaches – everything. It’s Kansas. KU has players every year. Coach Self has had so many players go to the NBA. That’s an important thing.”

Various college basketball experts have noted that he would undoubtedly be ranked in the ESPN100 recruiting class had his high school playing career occurred in the United States. Mykhailiuk joins five-star signees, forward Cliff Alexander and guards Kelly Oubre and Devonte Graham, in KU’s class of 2014. Alexander was ranked No. 3 in the ESPN 100, while Oubre was No. 11 and Graham checked in a No. 36. In fact, Mykhailiuk played opposite Oubre and Alexander in the World Select Team’s loss to Team USA at the Nike Hoops Summit last month.

“Who knows what will end up happening with Andrew (Wiggins) and Joel (Embiid), but right now the consensus is that they will be two of the top-three players taken in the NBA Draft,” Self said. “How do you replace guys like that? The answer is you don’t. The way you try, though, is to go out and sign Cliff, Kelly, Devonte and now you add Sviatoslav to the mix. This could arguably be one of the very best recruiting classes that we’ve had. I think of last year’s class and I think of the class with Brandon (Rush), Mario (Chalmers) and Julian (Wright) – this class definitely rivals that.”

— KU Sports Information —

Three Bearcats named to USA Football U-19 team

USAF_logo_4cNorthwest Missouri State University football players Jordan Harold (St. Louis, Mo.), Nicholas Turner (St. Louis, Mo.) and Myles McIntyre (St. Louis, Mo.) have been named to the U.S. Under-19 National Team. All three players were redshirt-freshmen on the Bearcats’ 2013 NCAA Division II National Championship team.

The team, which was assembled by USA Football, will compete in the 2014 International Federation of AmericanFootball Under-19 World Championships. The eight-nation tournament will be held in Kuwait City, Kuwait, on July 7-16.

IFAF is composed of 64 nations spanning six continents that possess a national federation dedicated solely to American football.

The U.S. Under-19 National Team includes athletes representing 20 states and will compete in a field against national teams from Austria, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Kuwait and Mexico. The United States won the inaugural IFAF Under-19 World Championship in 2009 in Canton, Ohio. Canada claimed the 2012 gold medal in Austin, Texas.

The International Olympic Committee granted IFAF provisional IOC recognition during its December meeting in Lausanne, Switzerland. A vote on football could take place as early as 2017. If approved, football would join the Summer Olympics lineup in 2024 at a host city yet to be determined. USA Football is the United States’ delegate to IFAF.

U.S. players and coaches will take part in a training camp June 25 to July 1 at Shenandoah University in Winchester, Va. The team departs for Kuwait on July 2. The United States’ pool play schedule is:

Tuesday, July 8 – 1 p.m. (ET) vs. Mexico
Friday, July 11 – 4 p.m. (ET) vs. Germany
Sunday, July 13 – 4 p.m. (ET) vs. Japan

Games begin at 8 and 11 p.m. local time. The gold medal game is 4 p.m. (ET) Wednesday, July 16, between pool winners.

A national team exemption granted by the NCAA allows current college players to take part and for high schoolseniors to play for USA Football and not have their participation count among their two permitted all-star game appearances. The IFAF Under-19 World Championship is recognized as a national team competition.

USA Football is the sport’s national governing body in the United States.

— Northwest Sports Information —

Kansas City signs fifth-round draft pick Aaron Murray

ChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Wednesday that the club has signed quarterback Aaron Murray. Murray was the team’s fifth-round pick in the 2014 NFL Draft (208th overall).

He became the fifth of Kansas City’s six selections in the draft to sign with the club.

Murray (6-0, 201) started all 52 games at Georgia and became the first player in both the SEC and Georgia’s history to throw for over 3,000 yards in four consecutive seasons.

He completed 921-of-1,478 passes (62.3%) for 13,166 yards, 121 touchdowns and 41 interceptions and carried the ball 286 times for 396 yards and 16 touchdowns. His 13,166 passing yards and 121 passing TDs also top the SEC all-time charts.

The Tampa, Fla., native prepped at Plant High School where he earned first-team all-state honors.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

KU baseball loses to West Virginia in opener of Big 12 Tourney

KUOKLAHOMA CITY – Senior hurler Jordan Piche’ and senior centerfielder Tucker Tharp highlighted career days, as the Kansas baseball team fell to West Virginia, 10-9, Wednesday afternoon at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark.

A combined 19 runs and 26 hits capped off by a Big 12 Championship record of seven doubles in a game by the Jayhawks (34-23) led to a wild finish as West Virginia (28-24) erased a six-run deficit in the seventh inning with an eight-spot to steal the game away from KU.

“I congratulate West Virginia,” head coach Ritch Price said. “We felt really good about the score late in the game, but give credit to West Virginia for battling back.”

Piche’ was an absolute machine through the first six innings, striking out a career-high 11 batters. His only blemish, besides a two-run first after a KU error, were the three runners left on base in the seventh after a single and back-to-back walks.

“We put up the two four-spots back-to-back and I think Jordan sat in the dugout quite a while,” Price said. “He went back out there and got behind the first guy and then he hits a 2-0 fastball for a base hit. Then we walked two guys with one out and it ran his pitch count up over 100 pitches.”

“You sit there and let your body rest a little too much and you start to tighten up,” Piche’ added. “You still have to go out there and compete and throw strikes. It is unfortunate that it didn’t happen and you have to trust your bullpen in that situation. It’s unfortunate that the eight-spot happened as a result.”

Although on the wrong end of the stick, Kansas has a lot to hang its hat on as the Jayhawks pounded out 13 hits, including nine off WVU starter Harrison Musgrave. KU tied a championship record with seven doubles led by the perfect 4-for-4 performance at the dish by Tharp. The centerfielder added two walks and drove in three runs, scorching the ball over all-conference performer and WVU’s centerfielder Bobby Boyd’s head twice in the process.

“I think he (Boyd) might be the fastest centerfielder in the league – he was a first teamer,” Tharp said. “When you hit the ball there, you expect him to get there. In this ballpark, the wind blows South and if you get the ball up in the air, it will keep going. I was a little surprised that he didn’t get to those balls, but at the same time, very fortunate that they did get down. He is a really good player.”

Fellow outfielder and cleanup man Dakota Smith also boasted a multi-hit and multi-RBI performance at the plate, slugging three hits, including a double, with two RBIs and three runs scored.

“I think our guys did a really good job at taking the fastball away,” Price said. “We were able to be on time with the fastball and be physical. Tucker Tharp had some great at bats as did Dakota Smith and both those guys are fastball hitters.”

With all that offense and a six-run lead in the seventh inning, Price called to the bullpen to bring in junior righty Drew Morovick (9-4) with one out and the bases loaded. After inducing the fielder’s choice, Morovick gave up four-straight two-out hits, including back-to-back doubles, allowing the Mountaineers to score five runs before Kansas made another move to the pen to bring in freshman closer Stephen Villines.

On the first pitch of the first batter Villines faced with two runners on, WVU designated hitter Jackson Cramer dropped the hammer and launched a three-run bomb over the wall in right field to close out the eight-run inning and put the final dagger in the hopes of a Kansas win.

“It is tough to see us go down like that – it hurts,” Piche’ said. “We need to come out tomorrow and get after it.”

Kansas rallied for a run in the bottom of the eighth inning, but stranded the bases loaded. The Jayhawks rallied again in the ninth to get two runners on with two outs, but junior designated hitter Connor McKay flew out to end the game and strand both Jayhawks for a total of 15 runners left on base for KU.

Junior left fielder Michael Suiter was the only other player with a multiple-hit performance, as he finished the day 2-for-6 with an RBI and two runs scored.

Kansas continues play at the 2014 Phillips 66 Big 12 Baseball Championship Thursday, May 22, and will play the loser of TCU vs. Baylor at 9 a.m.

— KU Sports Information —

Kansas City’s rally comes up short in 7-6 loss to White Sox

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Adam Dunn hit a three-run homer and the Chicago White Sox defeated the Kansas City Royals 7-6 on Tuesday night.

Andre Rienzo (4-0) limited the Royals to two runs and five hits over six innings. He struck out a career-high eight.

The Royals’ record dropped to 5-15 against American League Central opponents.

Gordon Beckham and Conor Gillaspie, who each had three hits, singled before Dunn homered in the eighth off right-hander Aaron Crow, who had allowed two three-run homers in his past two appearances.

Beckham has hit safely in 13 of his past 15 games, while Gillaspie increased his average to .347.

Royals rookie right-hander Yordano Ventura (2-4) took the loss, allowing four runs and seven hits, including a Tyler Flowers home run, in six innings.

Ventura threw three wild pitches in the White Sox three-run fifth, the last one allowing Beckham to score.

Danny Valencia doubled home Billy Butler and Alex Gordon with the first two Kansas City runs in the second.

White Sox relievers Scott Downs and Frank Francisco combined to retire only one of the six batters they faced in the eighth as the Royals scored three runs. Gordon and Cain had RBIs, while Cain scored on a Francisco wild pitch.

Zach Putnam restored order by retiring pinch hitter Mike Moustakas on an infield popup and Nori Aoki on a ground ball that shortstop Alexei Ramirez made a diving stop with runners on the corners.

Ronald Belisario, who threw 21 pitches and two innings Monday, gave up a run in the ninth, but earned the save.

Gordon’s two-out single scored Butler, who had doubled. Jarrod Dyson ran for Gordon and stole second. Belisario struck out Cain on three pitches to end the game.

— Associated Press —

Wainwright throws a one-hitter to lead Cards past Arizona

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Adam Wainwright threw a one-hitter, facing one hitter over the minimum, and the St. Louis Cardinals ended an eight-game home run drought with long balls from Matt Adams and Jhonny Peralta in a 5-0 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Tuesday night.

Working on six days rest because of a rainout and day off, Wainwright (7-2) retired the first 11 batters before Paul Goldschmidt doubled off the wall in center with two outs in the fourth. He matched his season best with nine strikeouts, fanning A.J. Pollock twice.

Peralta hit his team-leading ninth of the season in the sixth and added one of the Cardinals’ five doubles for a second RBI against Bronson Arroyo (4-3). Arroyo had been 3-0 with an 0.39 ERA in May and hadn’t allowed a homer his last four starts. Arroyo gave up five runs in seven innings.

Adams’ two-run shot in the first was the Cardinals’ first since May 9 when Peralta and Craig homered at Pittsburgh. It was their first in nine home games since Adams and Craig connected against the Brewers on April 30.

The Cardinals entered with 23 homers, fewest in the National League and second fewest in the majors.

The one-hitter was a career best for Wainwright, who has thrown four two-hitters. He threw his second shutout of the season and the eighth of his career on a day Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said struggling closer Trevor Rosenthal would not be available. Rosenthal has two blown saves his last five appearances, the last coming when he pitched for the fourth straight game and took the loss against the Braves on Sunday.

The Diamondbacks arrived minus new chief baseball officer Tony La Russa, who managed the Cardinals for 16 seasons and retired in 2011 after leading them to a second World Series title. Manager Kirk Gibson said before the game he didn’t think it would have been a distraction.

“Having him around, we look at as a positive,” Gibson said. “I would say he’s probably a little better at making decisions than I am.”

Pollock made an outstanding running catch in center field a few steps from the wall to rob Molina of extra bases in the sixth.

The Diamondbacks’ first three hitters had been 15 for 28 with four homers and 11 RBIs the previous three games.

— Associated Press —

Chiefs makes several roster moves Tuesday

riggertChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced several roster moves on Tuesday including the signings of defensive tackles Kyle Love and Jermelle Cudjo.

Additionally, the Chiefs have inked rookie free agent defensive lineman Kona Schwenke.

The team has placed defensive tackle Cory Grissom and linebacker Ridge Wilson on waivers.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File