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Royals stymied by Kluber, Indians in series finale

RoyalsCLEVELAND (AP) — Corey Kluber stayed stone-faced, maintaining the same stoic look in the clubhouse that he had for nine innings on the mound.

Only when prodded by an Indians teammate did Kluber crack.

“Did you smile after the game?” pitcher Justin Masterson yelled to Kluber.

“I did,” he said. “Only when I saw you.”

Kluber had everyone in Cleveland’s clubhouse smiling after he struck out a career-high 11 and pitched a four-hitter for his first complete game, leading the Indians to a 5-1 win over the Royals on Thursday.

Kluber (2-2) didn’t walk a batter, and his rare outing allowed Cleveland manager Terry Francona to give some needed rest to his bullpen.

“That was really fun to watch,” Francona said. “He had everything working. His fastball was going both ways, change-up, location. He worked ahead and he threw a ton of strikes. That was really impressive.”

Kluber is the first Cleveland pitcher to throw a complete game while recording 11 strikeouts, no walks or earned runs since Len Barker’s perfect game in 1981.

“It was nice,” said Kluber, who couldn’t remember the last time he pitched nine innings. “I really wasn’t trying to make a bigger deal out of it than going out there and getting three more outs. Maybe that’s why it worked out.”

David Murphy and Asdrubal Cabrera drove in two runs apiece in the Indians’ five-run fifth off Bruce Chen (1-2), who controlled Cleveland’s lineup for four innings.

The Indians have won four of five to get back to .500.

The Royals scored an unearned run off Kluber in the seventh when Omar Infante singled and scored when Indians first baseman Nick Swisher made a half-hearted attempt at Mike Moustakas’ grounder, which got by him for an error and rolled all the way into the right-field corner.

Other than that, Kansas City’s hitters were unable to do much against Kluber, whose previous long outing was 8 2/3 innings last July against the White Sox. He’s 3-0 in four career starts against the Royals.

“He put it to us,” said Alex Gordon, who went 0-for-4 and struck out to the end the game. “Give him credit. You look at our offense today and say we stunk. That’s how it was.”

Chen coasted through four innings, dominating the Indians with a mix of off-speed pitches before they touched him for five runs and chased him in the fifth.

The left-hander retired 11 straight before Carlos Santana led off with a double, snapping an 0-for-16 slide with just his third hit in 48 at-bats. Michael Brantley followed with a single to center for his team-leading 19th RBI, giving Cleveland a 1-0 lead.

The Indians didn’t stop there as Murphy slapped a two-run single to left, and Cabrera made it 5-0 with his double down the left-field line to end Chen’s outing.

The 28-year-old Kluber doesn’t come across as fiery, but Francona said his low-key demeanor is deceiving.

“He’s not the loudest guy in the clubhouse, but there’s a fire there, man,” Francona said. “He competes. He wants to be really good. He goes at it the right way. For a kid that doesn’t have a ton of time in the major leagues, he’s a good pro.”

Kansas City managed just one hit off Kluber in the first four innings, and then the Royals ran their way out of a scoring chance in the fifth when Alcides Escobar hesitated rounding second on Jarrod Dyson’s base hit, and Brantley threw him out from center.

The Royals turned a nifty double play to end the first.

With a Cabrera at third, first baseman Eric Hosmer fielded Jason Kipnis’ hard grounder, stepped on first and threw home. Catcher Brett Hayes made a sweeping tag on Cabrera, who was called out. Crew chief Bill Miller called for a review to see if Hayes had blocked the plate, but the call was confirmed.

— Associated Press —

Northwest’s Anderson announces the addition of two to softball roster

Northwest2013riggertNorthwest Missouri State softball coach Ryan Anderson announced the additions of Becca Maher (Des Plaines, Ill.) and Jessica Rawie (Liberty, Mo.) on Thursday morning.

“I believe that both of these individuals can come in and make an immediate impact for us,” said Anderson. “They are both very good athletes and come in with a good knowledge of the game. While both are very good at their primary positions, they each have the ability to adapt and possibly play multiple positions, which is a great advantage.”

Maher was an All-Mid Suburban League performer and an all-area performer for Elk Grove High School. She helped lead her team to a fourth place finish atstate as a sophomore and has also participated in volleyball and basketball. Maher has been named all-academic four times and is a member of the senior academic honor society.

Rawie earned all-district and All-Greater KC Suburban Big 6 Conference honors all four seasons at Liberty High School. She earned all-region honors as a catcher three times and was an academic all-state honoree as a senior. In her final season, she led the team with a .461 batting average and hit .605 with runners in scoring position. She also led the team in runs, RBIs and stolenbases. A multi-sport athlete, Rawie also lettered in basketball and track. Her parents, Doug and Cindy Rawie, are both graduates of Northwest Missouri State and her older sister, Megan, is a senior at Northwest.

— Northwest Sports Information —

St. Louis drops three-of-four at Mets with loss Thursday

CardsNEW YORK (AP) — Daisuke Matsuzaka pinched his eyelids, clenched his teeth and thought back. He couldn’t remember all the details of the first save of his professional career.

After 123 starts during seven seasons in Major League Baseball, the 33-year-old right-hander was turned into a reliever by the New York Mets when they brought him up from the minor leagues on April 16. Eight days later, manager Terry Collins took a chance — a roll of the Dice-K? — and Matsuzaka responded with a perfect ninth inning Thursday to cap a 4-1 win over the St. Louis Cardinals.

He hadn’t saved a game since May 2000, his second season with the Seibu Lions of Japan’s Pacific League, when he struck out four during the final three innings of a 9-0 win at the Chiba Lotte Marines.

“It’s definitely different,” he said through a translator, “but I think I’m starting to get used to going from the bullpen.”

Chris Young homered to start New York’s comeback from a 1-0, fifth-inning deficit, slumping Curtis Granderson singled in a run as a pinch hitter and Daniel Murphy drove in two runs. Bartolo Colon (2-3) allowed four hits in seven innings, struck out eight and walked none, sending Lance Lynn to his first career loss in April.

Matsuzaka, who completed a four-pitcher, four-hitter, was a rookie of the year in Japan in 1999, MVP as his national team won the first World Baseball Classic in 2006 and was given a $52 million, six-year contract by the Boston Red Sox after they paid Seibu $51,111,111.11 for his rights.

Matsuzaka went 15-12 in his first season with the Red Sox and 18-3 in his second, but he injured a hip during the 2009 WBC and was never the same, hurting his arm and eventually needing elbow ligament-replacement surgery.

He was just 50-37 for the Red Sox and signed a minor league contract in February 2013 with Cleveland, which released him in August. Then he joined the Mets, started seven games and signed a minor league deal with New York, which initially sent him to Triple-A Las Vegas this spring.

But when Bobby Parnell’s season ended with a torn elbow ligament on opening day, the Mets had to scramble to restock their bullpen. Jose Valverde struggled as the closer and Kyle Farnsworth took over the role.

Manager Terry Collins wanted to give the 38-year-old Farnsworth a rest after three appearances in four days.

“I just said this is a good opportunity to see how Dice handles it,” Collins explained, “and he did well.”

In a 15-pitch outing, Matsuzaka retired Allen Craig on a lineout to right after falling behind 3-1, struck out Daniel Descalso in an eight-pitch at-bat and got Peter Bourjos on a game-ending foulout to the catcher.

“Before, I never really thought I would be able to pitch out of the bullpen because I just take so long to prepare,” Matsuzaka said. “I think I just have to keep pitching well to gain full confidence from the team, but I think having had a few opportunities in tight situations definitely is encouraging.”

Collins said Farnsworth, who has two saves, remains his first-choice closer but Matsuzuka may receive more ninth-inning opportunities. His preparation, which includes lengthy stretching, will have to change.

“If he’s going to pitch the back end of the game, be it the eighth, the ninth, somewhere in there,” the manager said, “I don’t want him to wear himself out in the fifth inning, at 8:15. I want him to kind of save something.”

Dice-K said it’s as much mental as physical.

“Just to comfort myself, I think I throw more than I probably have to,” he said.

New York also gave 40-year-old right fielder Bobby Abreu hit first big league start since July 25, 2012. Abreu went 1 for 3 with an opposite-field double to left in the fifth — his first hit with the Mets.

“It’s been a long time,” he said. “It was kind of exciting. At first I had to calm down my emotions and just go out there and play the game.”

New York took three of four from the defending NL champions and has won four of five overall.

St. Louis lost for the sixth time in nine games and has gone 291 at-bats without a home run since Allen Craig connected at Milwaukee off Wily Peralta on April 16.

Lynn (4-1) had been 12-0 through April in his big league career, including one March victory. But given a fifth-inning lead, he allowed the Mets to tie the score in the bottom half and go ahead 2-1 on Murphy’s RBI double in the sixth, a ball that dropped just in front of diving centerfielder Jon Jay.

Lynn was chased in a two-run seventh after Eric Young Jr. bunted and reached on a two-base error when the pitcher threw off first baseman Matt Adams’ glove and into right field. Granderson had been 2 for 20 against left-handers this year before he greeted Kevin Siegrist with an RBI single, and Murphy singled in the final run.

“We’ve been home six days in the past 2 1/2 months,” Lynn said. “I think a lot of people are looking forward to getting home and sleeping in their own beds.”

— Associated Press —

Northwest golf signs two student-athletes to 2014-2015 class

Northwest2013riggertNorthwest Missouri State golf coach Pat McLaughlin has announced the signings of two student-athletes to the 2014-15 Bearcat roster. Shelby Williams (Adair, Iowa) and Gia Zupancic (Pueblo, Colo.) will join Maddy Probst from Lawson, Mo., who signed with Northwest in the fall.

“I am excited about the three new players who will be joining our golf team in the fall,” said McLaughlin. “With the graduation of two of our top scoring players, Kristina D’Angela and Cassie Lowell, I knew it was important to add some recruits who could have an immediate positive impact on our program. Ifirmly believe that all three of these ladies have the capability of doing so.”

Williams arrives at Northwest after playing at Iowa Southwestern Community College. She was the team’s No. 1 player and will be a sophomore beginning in the fall. Williams was an all-state golfer at Adair-Casey High School and was named an all-conference performer three times. As a senior, Williams placedeighth at the state championships after finishing runner up at the regionalmeet. She lettered in golf all four years.

Zupancic was a first-team all-state performer at Pueblo East High School. She was a three-time all-region selection as well. She carries a career 78-stroke average and had an 81-stroke average at the 6,010 yard Flatirons Golf Course at the Colorado Junior Golf Association’s World Qualifier.

— Northwest Sports Information —

Griffon softball moves up to No. 6 in NCAA Central Regional rankings

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western softball team found itself ranked 6th in the second NCAA Central regional ranking, unveiled late Wednesday afternoon by the NCAA Division II softball committee.

The Griffons (31-15), who last qualified for the NCAA tournament in 2012, were one of four Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletic Association teams to sit atop the Central region. In a region comprised of teams from the MIAA, Great America Conference, and the and the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference, the Griffons sit ahead of Southeastern Oklahoma State (7th), Fort Hays State (8th), Southern Arkansas (9th) and East Central (10th). Emporia State leads the way while Winona State sits No. 2. Minnesota State, Augustana (S.D.) and Central Oklahoma came in 3rd-5th respectively.

The top eight teams qualify for the NCAA Central regional, which will begin on May 9 at two campus sites. Seeds one, four, five, and eight will compete at one site in a double-elimination format, while seeds two, three, six, and seven will do the same at a second site. Each sub-regional winner will advance to the Central super-regional the following weekend for a best-of-three showdown, with the advancing team moving on to the NCAA Div. II College World Series – held in Salem, Va., from May 22-26.

The NCAA will release its second of three weekly polls next Wednesday (April 23), with a final regular season release coming on Wednesday, April 30. The selection show will take place on Monday, May 5.

Under the direction of head coach Jen Bagley, the Griffons will take on Northeastern State on Friday, April 24 in St. Joseph, Mo. Game time is set for 4 pm. They will round out the season on Saturday, April 25th with a doubleheader against Central Oklahoma beginning at noon. The Griffons will honor four seniors who will be playing their last home regular season games of their career. They are Kat Steponovich, Jackie Bishop, Michelle Stevenson and Taylor Anding.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Chiefs 2014 schedule released; will play four national TV games

riggertChiefsThe National Football League announced on Wednesday the regular season schedule for the 2014 season. The Kansas City Chiefs will be featured in four nationally televised games including three in regular season play.

Kansas City will take on the New England Patriots on ESPN’s Monday Night Football in Week Four and then have back-to-back nationally televised contests in Weeks 12 and 13 when they travel to Oakland for a Thursday night contest against the Raiders followed by a Sunday night matchup vs. the Denver Broncos on NBC.

This season will mark the fifth-consecutive year the Chiefs have held at least one primetime contest. The last time Kansas City held three nationally televised games was in 2010.

“We always look forward to the schedule coming out,” Head Coach Andy Reid said. “This allows us to get started preparing for our opponents in the order we play them. Today is really about our fans. There is no question that Chiefs Kingdom will be fired up come September.”

Kansas City’s schedule features seven games against five playoff teams from the 2013 season, including the Super Bowl Champion Seattle Seahawks. The club’s 2014 opponents boasted a combined record of 117-91 (.563) last season.

The Chiefs begin their 2014 slate at Arrowhead Stadium vs. the Tennessee Titans on Sept. 7. The club will then travel to Denver to face the division rival Broncos on Sept. 14 followed by a trip to Miami for its second-consecutive road contest on Sept. 21.

After facing the Patriots on Monday Night Football, Chiefs QB Alex Smith will make his return to San Francisco to face his former squad on Sunday, Oct. 5. The club has its Bye Week in Week Six then travels to San Diego to take on the Chargers on Oct. 19.

The Chiefs then return to Arrowhead Stadium to meet the St. Louis Rams on Oct. 26 in the Missouri Governor’s Cup matchup with their cross-state rival. After contests vs. the Jets and at Buffalo, the Chiefs face the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday, Nov. 16. Kansas City travels to Arizona after back-to-back divisional matchups in Oakland and then vs. the Broncos.

On Dec. 14, the Oakland Raiders will visit Arrowhead. The Chiefs are looking to repeat the sweep of the Raiders after defeating them twice in 2013. In Week 16, Kansas City will take on the Pittsburgh Steelers at Heinz Field before closing out its regular season slate at home vs. the Chargers on Dec. 28.

Sunday, Sept. 7 vs. Tennessee Titans Noon

Sunday, Sept. 14 at Denver Broncos 3:25 p.m.

Sunday, Sept. 21 at Miami Dolphins 3:25 p.m.

Monday, Sept. 29 vs. New England Patriots 7:30 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 5 at San Francisco 49ers 3:25 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 12 BYE WEEK

Sunday, Oct. 19 at San Diego Chargers 3:05 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 26 vs. St. Louis Rams Noon

Sunday, Nov. 2 vs. New York Jets Noon

Sunday, Nov. 9 at Buffalo Bills Noon

Sunday, Nov. 16 vs. Seattle Seahawks Noon

Thursday, Nov. 20 at Oakland Raiders 7:25 p.m.

Sunday, Nov. 30 vs. Denver Broncos 7:30 p.m.

Sunday, Dec. 7 at Arizona Cardinals 3:05 p.m.

Sunday, Dec. 14 vs. Oakland Raiders Noon

Sunday, Dec. 21 at Pittsburgh Steelers Noon

Sunday, Dec. 28 vs. San Diego Chargers Noon

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Kansas City can’t hold early lead as they lose 5-3 at Indians

RoyalsCLEVELAND (AP)  — With seven games still left this month, Jason Kipnis has already surpassed his statistics from last April.

That wasn’t hard to do.

“I set the bar so low,” he said.

Kipnis drove in Nick Swisher from first base with a two-out double in the seventh inning, sending the Cleveland Indians to a 5-3 win over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday night.

Kipnis, who batted just .200 with one homer and four RBIs in the season’s first month in 2013, ripped his double off Kelvin Herrera (0-1) into the gap in right-center, deep enough to easily score Swisher, who reached on a two-out single.

“That was a real big hit,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. “Sometimes you need a big hit at a big time and we got it tonight.”

Kipnis has become big time.

After shaking off his horribly slow start last season, he made his first All-Star team, batted .284 and developed into one of the AL’s top all-around players.

So, when he came up in another clutch situation, it wasn’t surprising to any of the Indians that Kipnis came through.

Kipnis signed a six-year, $52.5 million contract on opening day and he’s wasted no time in living up to the deal.

“I think he has less far to climb this year,” Francona said. “He really dug himself a hole last year. He’s always a threat, whether it’s against a left-hander or right-hander. He can hit the ball all over the field or out of the ballpark. He can beat you with his legs.

“I don’t really look up and see what Kip’s batting average is, we want him hitting all the time.”

The Indians tacked on an important insurance run in the eighth on pinch-hitter Lonnie Chisenhall’s bloop RBI single.

Bryan Shaw (1-0) finished the seventh and got one out in the eighth. Cody Allen retired two, and John Axford worked the ninth for his AL-leading eighth save.

Michael Bourn had three hits and two RBIs for the Indians. Bourn, Nick Swisher and Kipnis, Cleveland’s 1-2-3 hitters, combined for six hits and three RBIs.

Salvador Perez and Mike Moustakas hit back-to-back homers in the second for Kansas City.

Indians starter Justin Masterson remained winless through five starts. The staff’s ace, who turned down a contract extension during spring training, allowed two earned runs and eight hits in 6 1/3 innings.

“I’ll take as many no-decisions as come as long as we’re winning,” he said.

Down 3-2, the Indians tied it in the sixth off lefty starter Jason Vargas when Michael Brantley scored from first on two Kansas City errors.

Brantley singled with one out, and broke for second with two down and Yan Gomes batting. As Brantley slid safely into second, the throw from catcher Perez skipped into center field. Brantley hustled toward third and center fielder Jarrod Dyson took his eye off the ball, overrunning it and letting the tying run score.

“I came in too hard,” Dyson said. “I should have come in and played it off the hop because I probably didn’t have a shot at him anyway. I have to remind myself to slow the body down. I came in crashing like that. When you have two outs and your pitcher up there doing his thing you kind of have to settle down and not make that mistake.”

Moustakas gave the Royals a 3-2 lead in the sixth, when an error by second baseman Kipnis helped set up Kansas City’s unearned go-ahead run.

Eric Hosmer singled and was safe at second after Kipnis dropped shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera’s low throw. Hosmer moved to third on a fielder’s choice and Moustakas delivered his two-out RBI single.

Bourn atoned for a baserunning blunder with a two-run triple in the second to tie it 2-2.

Perez and Moustakas connected in the second off Masterson.

With one out, Perez snapped an 0-for-22 slump with a drive over the center-field wall for his first homer.

Four pitches later, Moustakas made it 2-0 with a liner into the Royals’ bullpen, the same place he hit a three-run shot on Tuesday in Kansas City’s 8-2 win.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western volleyball adds three prep players to 2014 recruiting class

riggertMissouriWesternMissouri Western head volleyball coach Marian Carbin announces the signing of three more student-athletes for the 2014 season. Erin Bodenstab of Blue Springs, Mo. (Blue Springs High School), Amanda Dalbey of Lansing, Kan. (Lansing High School) and Danielle Moore of Bloomington, Ill. (Central Catholic High School) will join Ashley Mainord an outside hitter/middle blocker from Springtown, Texas who signed back in November 2013.

“We are very excited to announce the signing of these three young ladies,” commented Coach Carbin. “As a group they will add much needed depth at key positions and also bring flexibility to our roster as two of the three have the potential to play multiple positions.”

Erin Bodenstab is a 5-9 setter from Blue Springs, Mo. where she attended Blue Springs High School. She a four year member and a three year starter on her high school team. During her career she earned multiple awards which include 1st Team All-Area, All-District and All-Conference. She was also a 2nd Team All-Region and Honorable Mention All-State selection. She played in the Mo/Kan All-Star game and was a selected to the All-Tournament team at the Missouri State Tournament. She is the daughter of Dena an dTom and is undecided on a major.

“Erin Bodenstab will be a great competitor on our team in the coming years,” stated Coach Carbin. “She has a fiercely competitive approach to the game, exemplified by the fact that she carried her underdog high school team to a district championship on a night that she was sick and probably shouldn’t have played. That attitude will fit right in with our current team’s desire to reach their full potential. She will compete for playing time as both a setter and defensive specialist throughout her career.”

Amanda Dalbey is a 5-9 outside hitter/defensive specialist from Lansing Kan. where she attended Lansing High School. She is a three year letter winner while being a two time 1st Team All-League selection (2012 & 2013). She was also her teams captain as a senior and named to the Kansas State All-Academic Team. As a sophomore she was a 2nd Team All-League performer. She is also a very good student being a member of the National Honor Society and National English Honor Society. She is the daughter of Stephanie and John and plans on majoring in sport and exercise science.

“Amanda Dalbey will be a huge asset to our defense with her quickness and exemplary ball control skills,” said Coach Carbin. “She also has great instincts that seem to put her in position to make the big defensive plays on a regular basis. She is a leader on the court and we expect her to compete at both the outside hitter and defensive specialist positions.”

Danielle Moore is a 5-10 outside hitter from Bloomington, Ill. where she attended Central Catholic High School. She had a solid high school career being named First Team All-Area, First Team All-Conference and Honorable Mention All-State as a senior. She also helped her team to a Regional Championship twice (2011 & 2013). Here team went to the Sweet Sixteen and where the Intercity Champions her senior season. She has been a member of the Illinois Elite Volleyball Club since the 5th grade. This past season she hit over .400 with 262 kills (3.9/set), 308 digs (3.7/set) and 59 service aces. She is a solid student being a member of the National Honor Society. She is the daughter of Julie and Tom and is undecided on a major.

“Danielle Moore will be our third signee from Illinois in three years and we’re excited about her length,” commented Coach Carbin. “She has a long reach which will help her offensively as an outside hitter and also as a blocker. We are confident that she will help our team offensively right away, and we see a lot of potential for her to develop into a six rotation player at some point in her career as a Griffon.”

— MWSU Sports Information —

Cardinals come up short against Mets, 3-2

CardsNEW YORK (AP) — Lucas Duda hit a long home run and the New York Mets threw out the potential tying run at the plate in the ninth inning to hold off the St. Louis Cardinals 3-2 Wednesday night with a stiff wind whipping through Citi Field.

Jonathon Niese earned his first win of the season, and shortstop Ruben Tejada cut down Matt Carpenter for the second out of the ninth on a strong relay from center fielder Kirk Nieuwenhuis.

St. Louis manager Mike Matheny challenged the call by plate umpire Marty Foster, which was upheld following a replay review of 1 minute, 20 seconds that showed catcher Travis d’Arnaud nicked Carpenter with a sweep tag near his armpit.

Cardinals right-hander Michael Wacha (2-2) set career highs with 10 strikeouts and five walks in the shortest of his 14 regular-season starts in the majors. A bizarre outing if ever there was one — but it was that sort of night.

With a runner on second, Kyle Farnsworth retired Matt Holliday on a fly to right to end it.

Curtis Granderson snapped his career-worst hitless skid at 22 at-bats with a first-inning single, and the Mets got 6 2/3 effective innings from Niese (1-2) before turning it over to the bullpen.

Carlos Torres and Scott Rice escaped an eighth-inning jam before Farnsworth worked the ninth for his second save. He gave up consecutive singles and an RBI double to pinch-hitter Daniel Descalso that one-hopped the wall in left-center, but New York’s defense saved Farnsworth.

Carpenter had four hits and Yadier Molina added three for the Cardinals, but Jhonny Peralta’s hitless streak reached 21 at-bats. Peralta popped out with runners at second and third in the eighth before pinch-hitter Matt Adams flied out to end the inning.

Niese improved to 4-1 in six career starts against St. Louis.

The game began in 31 mph wind gusting up to 41 mph on a 51-degree night at a mostly empty stadium. Workers hustled between innings to clean up all the flying napkins and hot dog wrappers that littered the outfield — even bundled-up second base umpire Rob Drake helped out during a stoppage in play.

High popups and flyballs were an adventure. Mets shortstop Ruben Tejada dropped one after retreating into the outfield, then scampering back to the infield. New York still got an easy forceout on the play.

Wacha’s red cap blew right off his head as he was waiting for a new ball and rolled, like tumbleweed, to second baseman Mark Ellis.

Duda homered against Seth Maness leading off the sixth, a laser beam of a line drive that cut under the wind and nearly reached the Shea Bridge walkway above the bullpens in right-center.

It was the first home run for the Mets in their last seven home games, ending their longest such drought since May 2012.

Early on, it appeared the 22-year-old Wacha was headed to a record-setting performance.

Last year’s NL championship series MVP overpowered the Mets with nine strikeouts in the first three innings but soon lost his control. He walked three in the fourth, including No. 8 batter Tejada and Nieuwenhuis with the bases loaded, forcing in two runs.

Wacha was pulled for a pinch hitter in the fifth after throwing 93 pitches. Coming in, he had issued only three free passes in 26 innings this season.

Molina doubled home a run with two outs in the first, extending his hitting streak to 14 games, after Tejada and the Mets botched a rundown that should have resulted in an inning-ending double play.

— Associated Press —

MWSU golf teams each finish 7th at MIAA Championships

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western men’s golf team shot another solid round on the final day of the MIAA Championships helping them to a 7th place finish out of the 12 team field. The Griffons fired a three day total of 906 (301-303-302) which was one stroke behind Washburn and Lindenwood for 5th and four strokes back of Central Oklahoma and Lincoln for 3rd. Central Missouri won the event with a 867 (283-288-296) which was 16 strokes ahead of second place finisher Northeastern State, 883 (291-303-289).

Individually, the Griffons were led by junior Scott Sheldon firing a three round total of 223 (73-76-74) placing him in 13th place. Senior Evan McCarthy finished in a tie for 18th with a 226 (76-73-77) while senior Tyler Gast finished in a tie for 23rd with a 227 (77-73-77). James O’Brien and Derek Hawkins finished with 233 (75-81-77) and 241 (82-85-74) respectively.

The winner of the event was Cy Moritz of Central Missouri firing a 212 (68-71-73). he was five strokes ahead of teammate Travis Mays, 217 (71-72-74) and Clayton Moles of Southwest Baptist, 217 (71-72-74).

The Griffons say goodbye to three seniors who played in their last event. Those players are Evan McCarthy, Tyler Gast and Derek Hawkins.

The event was played at Alvamar Golf Club on the Championship Course. The course is a par 72 with a distance of 7092.

Men’s Final Team Standings
1.    Central Missouri (56)
2.    Northeastern State (49)
3.    Central Oklahoma (43)
4.    Lindenwood (41)
5.    Nebraska-Kearney (39)
6.    Washburn (33)
7.    Lincoln (31)
8.    Fort Hays State (28.5)
9.    Missouri Western (28)
10.    Missouri Southern (25.5)
11.    Pittsburg State (9)
12.    Southwest Baptist (7)

After the final round of the MIAA Women’s Golf Championships the Griffon women finished 7th place out of the nine team field. The Griffons fired a three day total of 1097 (363-372-362) which is 23 strokes back of Nebraska-Kearney (1074) for 6th. The winner of the event is the University of Central Oklahoma who fired a 958 (320-321-317) which is 15 strokes ahead of Northeastern State who fired a 973 (326-327-320).

The Griffons were led by sophomore Callie Wilson who had a solid event finishing in a tie for 10th place. She fired a 252 (81-86-85) and sits one stroke back of 9th and three strokes ahead of 12th. The winner of the event was Baylee Price of Northeastern State who fired a 233 (79-77-77) which was three strokes ahead of teammate Sofia Castiello’s 236 (80-78-78).

Madison Romjue finished in 21st with a three day total of 268 (95-87-86) while Anna Kloeppel finished in 29th with a 278 (91-98-89). Amber Chivington and Shelby Stone fired 300 (96-101-103) and 301 (98-101-102) respectively. The Griffons say goodbye to Stone as she was the lone senior who played her last event.

The event was held at the Alvamar Golf Club in Lawrence, Kan. on the Members Course. It is par 72 with a distance of 6237.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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