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Duffy carries perfect game into 7th as Royals defeat Orioles, 1-0

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Danny Duffy carried a perfect game into the seventh inning, Billy Butler drove in the only run and the Kansas City Royals held on to beat the Baltimore Orioles 1-0 Saturday night.

The 25-year-old Duffy (2-3) retired the first 20 batters he faced, rarely running the count to three balls and flirting with the first perfect game in franchise history. Adam Jones finally ended it with a weak ground ball up the middle with two outs in the seventh.

Duffy bounced back to get Chris Davis on a fly out to end the inning, then gave up a single to Nelson Cruz to start the eighth. Wade Davis retired the next three batters, and All-Star closer Greg Holland survived a bases-loaded jam in the ninth for his 11th save.

Holland allowed a hit and two walks before striking out Cruz to end the game.

Bud Norris (2-4) was the hard-luck loser, allowing four hits and a walk in 7⅓ innings.

The lone run he allowed came in the first, when Norichika Aoki led off with a single, stole second and then scored on Butler’s single to center. The hit ended an 0-for-10 slump, and gave Kansas City only its second run in the first three games of the four-game set.

Duffy missed most of last season while recovering from Tommy John surgery, and he began this season in the bullpen after losing the competition for a rotation spot in spring training. But he was forced back into the rotation a few weeks ago, when Bruce Chen landed on the disabled list with a back injury, and has pitched so well that he may have claimed the spot for good.

After struggling with control most of his first three seasons, Duffy has finally started to harness his stuff. He allowed one run on two hits in four innings in his first start May 3 against Detroit, and one run on two hits in six innings last week in Seattle.

He wound up losing both games when the Royals failed to score a run for him.

Perhaps with that in mind, Duffy kept the Orioles off the scoreboard entirely. He never got close to allowing a hit until Caleb Joseph hit a liner at third baseman Mike Moustakas to end the sixth inning, and Alex Gordon made a spectacular diving catch on Nick Markakis’s fly ball to lead off the seventh. Duffy then struck out Manny Machado before Jones delivered his single.

The crowd gave Duffy a standing ovation after the hit, and then another when he exited the game. Duffy sheepishly waved his cap in appreciation as he entered the dugout.

After dealing with a stiff neck, Davis returned to breeze through the rest of the eighth.

Holland put runners on the corners with one out in the ninth, and then struck out Jones moments after manager Ned Yost was tossed by plate umpire Chris Segal for arguing what he thought was strike three. Holland walked Davis to load the bases before striking out Cruz to end it.

The Royals have had four no-hitters in franchise history, the last by Brett Saberhagen against the Chicago White Sox on Aug. 26, 1991. The Orioles have not been no-hit since Sept. 1, 2007, when Clay Buchholz accomplished the feat for the Boston Red Sox.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals take down Atlanta for fourth straight win

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — When Braves second baseman Tyler Pastornicky backpedaled into shallow right field to catch the popup and Jason Heyward didn’t arrive fast enough to take charge, Kolten Wong got the green light.

The rookie raced home with the tying run on surely the shortest sacrifice fly of Yadier Molina’s career, one of many big plays the St. Louis Cardinals made with their legs in a 4-1 victory over the slumping Atlanta Braves on Saturday.

“By the time I realized I could get there, it would have been tough to call him off,” Heyward said. “Heads up play on their part by sending the runner.”

Wong and Peter Bourjos each had a pair of bunt singles, three of them fueling rallies. Bourjos got picked off after beating out a bunt leading off the third, but squeezed home an insurance run in the seventh.

“I think today was probably one of the best representations of what speed can do for us,” manager Mike Matheny said. “A lot of guys made things happen, getting on base and creating havoc.”

Wong set up the tying run by beating out a bunt to lead off the fourth. He squared around for another hit in the sixth and drew a wild throw from catcher Evan Gattis while stealing second, producing the go-ahead run.

The Cardinals matched their season high with their fourth straight win.

Miller (6-2) allowed a run and five hits in seven innings, one inning longer than his previous high this season. He matched his season best with seven strikeouts, fanning B.J. Upton three times, and called it his best outing of the year “for sure.”

“I felt like we did a really good job of keeping the hitters off-balance and getting ahead in the count,” Miller said. “Just an all-around good day, but at the same time there’s still room for improvement.”

Trevor Rosenthal fanned two in the ninth inning, with Upton striking out a fourth time, to earn his 13th save in 14 chances. He has a save in three straight games for the second time in his career.

Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez was ejected in the fifth inning for arguing a call that led to a bunt double play. He could face a fine for charging out of the dugout a second time and thought the ball was “maybe 5, 6 inches foul.”

“That’s what I kept asking: Can we get some help from one of the guys on the line?” Gonzalez said. “What are you going to do? We still scored one run.

“But that would have been a nice opportunity to try again to advance a runner,” he added.

Andrelton Simmons had three hits for Atlanta, which lost its third in a row and scored fewer than three runs for the 19th time in 41 games this season.

Miller has won six straight decisions in seven starts after losing his first two of the season. The last three St. Louis starters have worked seven innings.

In the fifth, Harang stayed in the batter’s box after his attempt to sacrifice Simmons to third didn’t go far. Molina pounced on the ball and threw to third, with shortstop Jhonny Peralta covering, for a tag play. Peralta had an easy relay to first to finish with second baseman Wong covering for an unusual 2-6-4 double play.

“What stinks is sometimes it’s those little plays that change the tempo of the game,” Harang said. “If it’s called four, then I can get another one down. It’s tough, you know.”

The Braves capitalized on shoddy defense to take the early lead.

Simmons scored from first on Harang’s two-out single — the pitcher’s first hit of the year. Harang took third after left fielder Matt Holliday threw behind him, then trotted home after Wong’s wild throw from second.

— Associated Press —

Missouri announces that freshman guard Shane Rector will transfer

MUMizzou Basketball announced that freshman guard Shane Rector will transfer out of the program. The Bronx, N.Y., native played in 23 games last season, averaging 0.5 points and 0.3 rebounds per game.

“I understand Shane’s desire for extended playing time and will do whatever I can to assist him in this process,” Head Coach Kim Anderson said. “I certainly want to thank Shane for his time at Missouri and want to wish him and his family all the best.”

One of Rector’s top games came in the SEC Tournament win over Texas A&M. He recorded three steals, hit 3-of-4 free throws and grabbed two rebounds in the final four minutes of the second overtime to help the Tigers to the 91-83 victory.

“I appreciate Coach Anderson and the administration at Missouri for supporting me as I look for a new opportunity,” Rector said. “This was a difficult decision because I have made some great friends during my time here. Mizzou is a great University with great people. This was just a personal decision that my family and I felt was in my best interest.”

— MU Sports Information —

Royals get blanked by Tillman, Orioles

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Chris Tillman paid no attention to the Baltimore bullpen as it started to stir in the ninth inning. After all, he had made it this far before. There was no way he was leaving the game now.

So after a leadoff single to start the inning, Tillman bore down against the Kansas City Royals. The young right-hander induced three straight groundouts to end the game, wrapping up a 4-0 victory for the Orioles and giving Tillman his first career shutout.

“I’ll take more of them,” he said, “but that’s not my goal.”

Maybe not. But it sure is nice.

Tillman came within two outs of a nine-inning complete game earlier this season, and he was incensed when he was pulled from an eventual 3-1 win over Detroit. He hadn’t been any happier of late, either, after scuffling through his last five outings.

But behind a dastardly combination of curveballs, changeups and fastballs, Tillman (4-2) kept the offensively inept Royals off balance. He scattered five hits and a walk, his dominant outing coming one night after Wei-Yin Chen and four relievers combined to beat Kansas City 2-1.

Chris Davis homered and Steve Clevenger also drove in a run for the Orioles.

“This is Tillman’s night,” the Royals’ Billy Butler said. “You’ve got to give him credit. He did his job today. He was locating, throwing all of his pitches. He did a heck of a job.”

Jeremy Guthrie (2-3) bounced back from a lousy start to last eight innings against his former team. The Royals’ starter allowed four runs, eight hits and a walk while striking out two.

While falling to 0-3 with four no-decisions in his last seven starts, Guthrie at least was able to save a bullpen that had been chewed up in that close loss the previous night.

“He threw the ball well. He really did,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.

As for that offense, which has managed one run in the last two games?

“Offenses heat up, cool off,” Yost said. “Right now we don’t have anybody where I can sit back and say this boy is really swinging the bat well right now.”

The game was played in a brisk 2 hours, 22 minutes, mostly because the starters were so effective. Tillman retired 13 of 14 batters after giving up a double to Norichika Aoki to start the game, and Guthrie only allowed a single by J.J. Hardy over the first three innings.

Baltimore finally got to Guthrie in the fourth, and it was partly his own doing.

Manny Machado led off by bunting back toward Guthrie, and he slipped while trying to field the ball. His hurried throw to first was wide of the bag for an error, and Machado trotted over to second base. Moments later, he headed for third when Guthrie threw a wild pitch.

Davis walked to put runners on the corners for Cruz, whose single drove in the game’s first run. Clevenger then grounded into a fielder’s choice to give the Orioles a 2-0 lead.

It remained that way until the sixth, when consecutive singles again put runners on the corners. Cruz then lofted a fly ball deep enough to center to bring home Adam Jones.

Davis added his third homer of the season with two outs in the eighth.

By that point, the only drama was whether Tillman would finish the game. The Orioles had two relievers up in the bullpen in the ninth, and the Royals got the leadoff man on base. But Tillman calmly got the next three batters to ground out to end the game.

“We talked to him between innings, like we always do. It was a lot of effort but there was no real stressful innings for him,” Orioles manager Buck Showalter said. “We had guys up and there was a point he was coming out of the game, but he was not going to be denied.”

— Associated Press —

Chiefs sign fourth-round pick De’Anthony Thomas

ChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Friday that the club has signed running back/specialist De’Anthony Thomas.

Thomas was the team’s fourth-round pick in the 2014 NFL Draft (124th overall). He became the fourth of Kansas City’s six selections in the draft to sign with the club.

Thomas (5-8, 174) played in 37 games (19 starts) at the University of Oregon. His career numbers with the Ducks include 243 carries for 1,961 yards (8.1 avg.) with 26 touchdowns. He caught 113 passes for 1,296 yards (11.5 avg.) with 15 touchdowns.

Thomas also served as one of the school’s return specialists, returning 16 punts for 274 yards (17.1 avg.) with one touchdown and 73 kickoffs for 1,885 yards (25.8 avg.) with four touchdowns. The Los Angeles, Calif., native also competed in track for the Ducks. He prepped at Crenshaw High School.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Craig, Lynn lead St. Louis past Atlanta

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Allen Craig had three hits, drove in a run and scored twice and Lance Lynn allowed two runs over seven innings to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to a 5-2 victory over the Atlanta Braves on Friday night.

Lynn (5-2) allowed seven hits walked two and struck out three. Carlos Martinez retired the Braves on four pitches in the eighth and Trevor Rosenthal set down the side in order for his 12th save in 13 opportunities.

Matt Carpenter and Kolten Wong had two hits each and scored a run for St. Louis. Matt Holiday, Matt Adams and Yadier Molina all drove in a run for the Cardinals.

St. Louis finished the game without manager Mike Matheny and center fielder Peter Bourjos, both of whom were ejected by home plate umpire Sean Barber at the end of the fourth inning for arguing balls and strikes.

The Braves’ Chris Johnson went 2 for 4 with a run scored. Johnson is batting .377 (20 for 53) in May.

While Johnson has been hot, his teammates have not. The Braves, who have lost 11 of 16, were held to two or fewer runs for the 18th time.

Ervin Santana (4-1) took his first loss as a member of the Braves. Santana lasted five innings and allowed five runs and 10 hits with one walk and three strikeouts.

St. Louis broke open a 2-2 tie by scoring three times in the fifth. With one out, Carpenter and Wong singled. Holliday followed with an RBI double down the right field line to score Carpenter. Wong scored on Craig’s single to left and Molina made it 5-2 with a sacrifice fly.

The Braves took a 1-0 lead in the second on a two-out RBI single by Tyler Pastornicky, but the Cardinals tied it in the bottom of the inning on Adams’ RBI double. After the Braves took a 2-1 lead in the fourth on Andrelton Simmons’ 6-4-3 double play ball, the Cardinals tied it in the bottom of the frame when Craig scored from third on Santana’s wild pitch with two outs.

— Associated Press —

Bearcat tennis falls to Armstrong Atlantic State in NCAA Quarterfinals

Northwest2013riggertALTAMONTE SPRINGS, Fla. – The No. 18 ranked Northwest Missouri State University men’s tennis team fell to No. 5 ranked Armstrong Atlantic State on Thursday evening in the quarterfinals of the NCAA Division II Championship tournament at Sanlando Park, 5-1. The Bearcats finish the year at 19-4 overall. The top-eight national finish is the highest placing in program history for Northwest.

Lluis Altimires and Sergio de Vilchez picked up the Bearcat’s only point of the evening. The duo won at No. 1 doubles, defeating the nation’s No. 7 team, 8-6. In singles, Northwest fell at No. 2, No. 1 and No. 4 positions.

Northwest beat Northwood University on Wednesday in the round of 16, 5-2.

No. 5 Armstrong Atlantic 5, No. 18 Northwest Missouri 1
May 15, 2014, Altamonte Springs, Fla. (Sanlando Park)

Singles competition
1. Pedro Scocuglia (ARM) def. DeVilchez,Sergio (NW), 1-6, 2-6
2. Jaan Kononov (ARM) def. Boissinot,Romain (NW) , 0-6, 0-6
3. Riveros,Alvaro (NW) vs. Ignacio Hernandez (ARM), unfinished
4. Pablo Gor (ARM) def. Altimires,Lluis (NW), 2-6, 4-6
5. Couronne,Julien (NW) vs. Luca Cerin (ARM), unfinished
6. Glowick,Fin (NW) vs. DamianOkrutny (ARM), unfinished

Doubles competition
1. Altimires,Lluis/DeVilchez,Sergio (NW) def. Jaan Kononov/Pedro Scocuglia (ARM), 8-6
2. Ignacio Hernandez/Damian Okrutny (ARM) def. Riveros,Alvaro/Clews,Amery(NW) 5-8
3. Luca Cerin/Pablo Gor (ARM) def. Boissinot,Romain/Couronne,Julien (NW), 3-8

— Northwest Sports Information —

Royals’ three-game win streak snapped with 2-1 loss to Baltimore

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Nelson Cruz homered and the first-place Baltimore Orioles beat the Kansas City Royals 2-1 on Thursday night to snap a four-game losing streak.

Cruz homered in the fourth after Chris Davis drew a walk to lead off the inning. It was Cruz’s 12th home run, which is second in the American League to the 15 of Chicago White Sox rookie Jose Abreu. Cruz’s 35 RBIs are tied for second in the AL.

Wei-Yin Chen (5-2) limited the Royals to one run and seven hits over 5 1/3 innings with one walk and one strikeout. Chen, who is 5-1 in his past seven starts, was removed in the sixth after Salvador Perez walked and Alex Gordon singled with one out. Darren O’Day replaced Chen and struck out Danny Valencia and retried Johnny Giavotella on a fly to right.

Royals rookie right-hander Yordano Ventura (2-3) struck out nine and walked one in 6 1/3 innings, allowing two runs and seven hits. After Cruz’s home run, Ventura retired the next 10 batters, striking out seven, including six straight at one stretch.

Valencia’s sacrifice fly with the bases loaded in the fourth scored Eric Hosmer for the only run off Chen.

Left-hander Zack Britton, who had not allowed a run in 7 1/3 innings and eight appearances, worked a perfect ninth for his first major league save. Manager Buck Showalter elected to go to Britton after closer Tommy Hunter blew his past two save chances.

The Royals did not have a baserunner off four Baltimore relievers, who retired 11 straight.

The Orioles, who went 1 for 9 with runners in scoring position, threatened in the seventh and eighth innings, but came away empty.

Gordon, a three-time Gold Glove Award winner, threw out J.J. Hardy at the plate to end the seventh for his fourth outfield assist this season and his 58th since moving to the outfield in 2011. Hardy attempted to score from second on Nick Markakis’ single.

Manny Machado and Adam Jones led off the Orioles eighth with singles off Louis Coleman, the third Kansas City pitcher. Kelvin Herrera replaced Coleman and struck out Davis and Cruz and retired Steve Clevenger on a grounder to strand the runners.

— Associated Press —

Griffons’ Bishop, Gillaspy earn NFCA First Team All-Region honors

riggertMissouriWesternMissouri Western softball players Jackie Bishop and Tiffany Gillaspy have been named to the National Fastpitch Coaches Association Central Region First team which was released Thursday afternoon. his year’s squads are comprised of 207 players from 102 schools across eight NFCA regions with first and second teams selected for each region. Both players were also named to the Daktronics First Team All-Region squad earlier this week with Bishop being named Daktronics Central Region Pitcher of the Year.

Bishop is completed one of the most successful playing careers in Missouri Western softball history. The Kirksville, Mo., native is a four-time First Team All-MIAA selection, two time MIAA Pitcher of the Year (2012-2014), four-time First Team All-Region recipient and an All-American selection in 2012. Bishop was also the MIAA Freshman of the Year in 2011. Bishop holds MWSU softball career records for wins (96), strikeouts (977), innings pitched (828.0), appearances (142) complete games (105) and shutouts (29). Additionally the two-time MIAA Pitcher of the Year holds MWSU single-season records for strikeouts (291) and shutouts (12) and is an integral member of a senior class that went 159-62 in its time dawning the Black and Gold. This season, the right-handed pitcher finished with a 26-10 overall record with a 1.36 ERA. The 26 wins is the most she had in a single season. She finished leading the MIAA with 291 strikeouts. She pitched 31 complete games with 12 shutouts and two saves this season. She gave up just 4.4 hits per games while striking out 8.3 per game. She threw three no-hitters this season and four in her career. She was named the MIAA AstroTurf Pitcher of the Week four times this season and 11 times in her career.

Gillaspy topped off an impressive junior campaign being named first team All-Region and first team All-MIAA for the first time in her career. Gillaspy a two-time MIAA AstroTurf Hitter of the Week finished her season getting a hit in 23 of her last 25 games and had an 19 game hitting streak during that run. She also hit safely in 45 of the Griffons 57 games this season. She finished the season leading the Griffons and was in the top-10 in the MIAA in batting average (.390), hits (73), doubles (13), home runs (13), RBI (60), total bases (125) and slugging percentage (.668). Gillaspy was an honorable mention All-MIAA selection a in 2013. She had double digit hits in 21 games including going 4-for-4 against Central Missouri on March 14. She has also had five RBI in a game three times and hit two home runs and a double against Lincoln on April 12. On the final day of the season she went 4-for-7 with two runs scored, four RBI a double and a home run in the NCAA Central Regional.

The Griffons finished their season 39-18 overall and won their first ever MIAA Tournament Championship going 4-0 and outscoring their opponents 41-9. They Griffons have won 30+ games in four straight seasons.

NFCA member coaches in the eight regions selected this year’s All-Region teams and all honorees now become eligible for selection to one of three NFCA Division II All-American squads to be announced the night of Wed., May 21.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Northwest’s McLaughlin announces his retirement

NWMSUNorthwest Missouri State golf coach Pat McLaughlin announced his retirement on Thursday morning. McLaughlin has been with the Bearcat golf program since its inception in 2006.

“As I retire from the coaching ranks, I want to give a sincere ‘thanks’ for the honor and privilege of being the inaugural head coach of the Bearcat women’s golf team,” said McLaughlin. “I want to thank the athletic department, our Northwest family and the community as a whole for their support, not only of our golf team, but also for me individually. Best wishes to the team and their continued future success!”

During his nine seasons with the Bearcats, McLaughlin has coached Northwest to 57 total top-five finishes, including 16 tournament victories and 16 runner-upfinishes. Northwest finished in the top-five in 81.4 percent of the 70 tournaments he coached in. In addition, the Bearcats finished in the Central Region top 12 the past two seasons and were in the top five of the MIAA standings every year under McLaughlin.

He was named the 2012 MIAA Coach of the Year and has led the Bearcats to three consecutive top-three finishes at the MIAA Championships. Cassie Lowell andSteph Charteris were each named the MIAA Freshman of the Year and both advanced to NCAA Championship play during their careers at Northwest. In 2012, Lowell was named the MIAA Player of the Year. In addition to strong play on the course, the Bearcats have also earned 13 NGCA academics awards since 2010.

“We appreciate coach McLaughlin’s commitment to Northwest women’s golf,” said Northwest Director of Athletics Mel Tjeerdsma. “He started our program nine years ago, culminating this season with a third place finish in the MIAA. He has consistently recruited young women who were outstanding golfers as well as first-class student-athletes. Thanks to coach McLaughlin efforts, we are pleased with where our women’s golf program is today and we look forward to watching their progress as they remain a consistent contender for the MIAA title.”

— Northwest Sports Information —

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