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Wacha, Cardinals hold off Pirates to force Game 5

CardsPITTSBURGH (AP) — Michael Wacha heard the chants. Then again, when 40,000 people clad in black scream your name relentlessly for the better part of three hours, it’s kind of hard to miss.

The goal was to rattle the St. Louis rookie, remind him that 22-year-old pitchers aren’t built to withstand the pressure of an elimination game.

One problem. Wacha doesn’t really do rattled. He doesn’t do pressure, either. The louder PNC Park grew, the more unhittable Wacha became.

”I kind of like it,” Wacha said. ”It kind of gives me adrenaline. I kind of use it in my favor.”

And the Pittsburgh Pirates – not to mention anyone else he might face in the postseason – ”kind of” need to get used to it.

Wacha took a no-hit bid into the eighth inning and the Cardinals showed off their October poise, edging the Pirates 2-1 Monday to force a winner-take-all Game 5 in the NL division series. St. Louis is 7-1 over the last three years with its season on the line.

”I think you take high talent and high character people that are motivated and support each other, and they don’t give up,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. ”That’s a tough combination.”

One the Pirates are still trying to master. Pedro Alvarez hit his third home run of the series, connecting with one out in the eighth for Pittsburgh’s only hit in Game 4. It wasn’t enough for the Pirates to advance to the NL championship series for the first time in 21 years.

”I guess that’s why we play five,” star center fielder Andrew McCutchen said. ”We’ll be ready for the fifth one.”

The Pirates weren’t quite ready for the fourth one, not with the way Wacha was dealing. He walked two and struck out nine before giving way to the bullpen in the eighth.

Matt Holliday’s two-run homer off Charlie Morton in the sixth was all the offense required on a day the Cardinals tossed the first one-hitter in the club’s lengthy postseason history.

Trevor Rosenthal worked around a two-out walk in the ninth, retiring McCutchen on a popup to shallow center field for his first postseason save.

”It was a good pitch for him,” McCutchen said. ”I wish it got a little more of the barrel. It would have been a great story.”

Instead, a taut series will head back to Busch Stadium.

Game 5 will be Wednesday, with ace Adam Wainwright starting for the NL Central champion Cardinals and rookie Gerrit Cole going for the wild-card Pirates. Both pitchers won last week in the NLDS.

The Cardinals finished with only three hits, and that was enough. Holliday got two of them, including his homer in the sixth after Morton walked big-hitting Carlos Beltran to start the inning.

”You could go back and look at pitches over and over again and second guess yourself,” Morton said. ”I don’t know where that pitch was. It was outer third somewhere, thigh-down and he went out and got it, he’s strong.”

So was the 6-foot-6 kid on the one, the one barely a year removed from a standout college career at Texas A&M. Wacha didn’t permit a runner until walking Russell Martin leading off the sixth.

Wacha nearly no-hit the Washington Nationals in his last start on Sept. 24, surrendering only an infield single by Ryan Zimmerman with two outs in the ninth.

Working so quickly the Pirates never had time to get settled, he breezed through Pittsburgh’s revamped lineup like he was in extended spring training. Mixing his fastball and changeup masterfully, Wacha overwhelmed the Pirates from the moment he stepped onto the mound.

Alvarez got the fans at PNC Park roaring with his homer, and Wacha followed by walking Martin on four pitches. Carlos Martinez relieved and Gold Glove catcher Yadier Molina made a key play, throwing out pinch-runner Josh Harrison after a botched hit-and-run attempt.

Martinez struck out Jose Tabata to end the eighth, and Rosenthal took over to begin the ninth. Neil Walker drew a two-out walk before McCutchen made the final out.

”That’s what it’s all about,” Rosenthal said. ”That’s what you dream of, you dream of two outs in the bottom of the ninth, you know … bases loaded, the best hitter up, and getting out of that spot.”

One the Cardinals rarely found themselves in on a day Wacha showed he’s just a big a part of his team’s present as he is its megawatt future.

McCutchen came into the game hitting .538 in the postseason but looked at a 97 mph fastball for strike three in the first. Marlon Byrd, Pittsburgh’s most consistent player since being acquired from the Mets in late August, watched a full-count heater in the second that sent him walking back to the dugout in disbelief.

It was a look repeated time and again by Byrd and the rest of his baffled teammates. Wacha struck out five of the first seven batters.

”He went out and hit his spots and it seemed like everything we were hitting, we were just missing, just missing,” McCutchen said.

Martin remained Pittsburgh’s lone baserunner until the eighth. Wacha fell behind 3-1 and Alvarez hit a 93 mph fastball at the knees onto the concourse in right-center.

The jolt, however, faded when Molina nailed Harrison at second minutes later to set up a 24th – and final – meeting between two teams that have been shadowing each other all summer and into the fall.

— Associated Press —

MWSU women’s golfers sit in 5th at Bearcat Fall Invite

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western women’s golf team sits in 5th place (331) after round one of the Northwest Missouri State University Bearcat Fall Invite which is being played at Mozingo Lake Golf Course.

The Griffons are 13 strokes out of first place as Bellevue University leads the nine team field with a 317. They are two strokes ahaed of host Northwest Missouri State who fired 319 in the opening round.

Western is led by sophomore Amber Chivington as she sits in seventh with a 78. Senior Shelby Stone had her best round of the fall with an 83 while Callie Wilson, Madison Romjue and Anna Kloeppel finished with 84, 85 and 86 respectively. Senior Darcy Smith is playing as an individual. She sits in 9th with an 80.

Renee Santoyo leads the event with a opening round 75. She is one stroke ahead of teammate Maria Saavedra and Northwest Missouri State’s Kritina D’Angela.

The final round of the event will be played Tuesday.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Eric Hosmer named Royals’ nominee for 2013 Hank Aaron Award

RoyalsMajor League Baseball and MLB Advanced Media announced that Eric Hosmer was named the Kansas City Royals’ nominee for the 2013 Hank Aaron Award.

Fans can vote exclusively online at MLB.com and the 30 Club sites. For the fourth straight year, a special panel of Hall of Fame players led by Hank Aaron will join fans in voting for the award, which is officially sanctioned by Major League Baseball and has recognized the most outstanding offensive performer in each League since it was established in 1999.

Hosmer enjoyed a breakout campaign, batting .302 with 34 doubles, 17 homers and 79 RBI.  He led the American League with 60 multi-hit games, which were tied for the fifth-most in Royals history.  The third-year first baseman ranked seventh in the league in hits (188), ninth in overall batting average (.302) and sixth in batting average vs. left-handed pitching (.323).  On May 18, Hosmer was batting .244 with 4 doubles, a homer and 14 RBI, but since May 19, he hit .317 with a Major League-leading 156 hits, 30 doubles, 16 homers, 68 RBI and a .484 slugging percentage.

The Hall of Fame panel led by Aaron includes some of the greatest offensive players of all-time –Roberto Alomar, Johnny Bench, Tony Gwynn, Paul Molitor, Eddie Murray and Robin Yount.  These Hall of Famers – who combined for 17,629 hits, 8,278 RBI and 1,723 home runs – have all been personally selected by Hank Aaron to lend their expertise to select the best offensive performer in each League.

Through October 10, fans will have the opportunity to select one American League and one National League winner from a list comprising of one finalist per Club. The winners of the 2013 Hank Aaron Award will be announced during the 2013 World Series.

“We knew all along that Eric has the capability of doing great things offensively, and it has been fun to watch him develop,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.  “He was arguably the best offensive player in the American League during the second half of the year.  His production was a big key as to why we had the best record in the league after the All-Star break.”

“It is a great honor that Major League Baseball recognizes the most outstanding offensive performer in each League with an award in my name,” said Hank Aaron. “The game is full of so many talented players today that I am thankful my fellow Hall of Famers and the fans assist in selecting the much deserving winners.”

— Royals Media Relations —

Griffon men’s golf team in 14th place after first day at UCM Invitational

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western men’s golf team sits in 14th place after day one of the UCM Heart of American Invitational firing a two round 601 (302-299).

There are 20 teams in the invite with host school Central Missouri leading the way with a 578 (295-283). The Mules lead Arkansas Tech by four strokes and Nebraska-Kearney by seven.

The Griffons are led by Scott Sheldon and James O’Brien as they both fired 148 (75-73) putting them in a tie for 27th. Derek Hawksin fired a 151 (75-76) while Evan McCarthy and Tyler Gast fired 154 (77-77) and 160 (81-79) respectively.

Cy Moritz of Central Missouri leads the field with a 140 (74-66) while Lance Lawson of Nebraska-Kearney is one stroke back with a 141 (71-70).

The final round of the event will be played on Tuesday.

— MWSU Sports Information —

MIAA hands out weekly football awards

riggertMIAAMissouri Southern’s Jay McDowell was named the MIAA Offensive Athlete of the Week while Pittsburg State’s Tyler Disney was named Defensive Athlete of the Week. Central Oklahom’s Marquez Clark was named the MIAA Special Teams Athlete of the Week.

MIAA Offensive Athlete of the Week
Jay McDowell, QB, Missouri Southern

McDowell helped the Lions to a 21-14 win over visiting Central Missouri this past week. He rushed for 225 yards on the night, becoming the first Southern quarterback to rush for over 200 yards since Josh Chapman had 246 against Missouri-Rolla in 2002. He was 5-10 through the air for 69 yards. The 6-1 sophomore is a native of Covington, La. where he competed at Covington High School.

MIAA Defensive Athlete of the Week
Tyler Disney, LB, Pittsburg State

Disney made 10 tackles, including three behind the line of scrimmage, as the Pitt State defense limited FCS member Abilene Christian to 10 net rushing yards (on 24 carries) and 270 total yards in a 28-20 victory Saturday (Oct. 5). Disney posted one of the Gorillas four quarterback sacks in the contest and his three TFLs totaled 13 yards. The 6-1 junior linebacker is a native of Stillwell, Kan. where he competed at Blue Valley High School.

MIAA Special Teams Athlete of the Week
Marquez Clark, KR-PR, Central Oklahoma

Clark finished with 365 all-purpose yards — the second-best game in school history — in UCO’s loss to No. 6-ranked Missouri Western. The junior wide receiver had three punt returns for a school-record 127 yards, five kickoff returns for 99 yards and caught nine passes for 139 yards. He had punt returns of 65 and 60 yards, with the 65-yarder reduced from an 80-yard TD return by penalty, and he scored on the 60-yard runback for UCO’s first punt return score since 2003. The 5-11 junior return specialist is a native of Texarkana, Texas where he competed at Liberty-Eylau High School prior to competing for Navarro College.

— MIAA Press Release —

MU’s Sam named SEC Defensive Lineman of the Week again

MUMizzou Football senior defensive lineman Michael Sam (Hitchcock, Texas) has been named the Southeastern Conference’s Defensive Lineman Player of the Week for the second week in a row, the league office announced on Monday. Sam picked up his second consecutive 3.0-sack performance in the Tigers’ 51-28 win at Vanderbilt in their SEC opener. The Mizzou DE made two of his sacks on 4th-down plays in the fourth quarter as he recorded five total stops in the victory.

The second honor for Sam marks the first time since 2007 that a Mizzou defender has been recognized with a weekly conference honor twice in one season. Pig Brown earned Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week on Sept. 4 and Oct. 22 of that year.

Sam’s 3.0 sacks tie the NCAA single-game high through Oct. 5 this season, and Sam is the only player in the nation so far to record 3.0 sacks in a game twice. The feat has been accomplished 16 times overall across the country, with Sam as the only repeat performer on the single-game list.

Sam’s recognition is the fourth Defensive Line Player of the Week honor earned by a Mizzou player from the SEC after junior DL Markus Golden (St. Louis, Mo.) and junior DL Kony Ealy (New Madrid, Mo.) earned the award for their defensive scores in the Sept. 7 win over Toledo and the Sept. 21 win at Indiana, respectively.

No. 25 Mizzou (5-0) hits the road for a Top 25 matchup at No. 7 Georgia on Saturday, Oct. 12, with an 11 a.m. kickoff on ESPN.

— MU Sports Information —

Big 12 Conference announces weekly football honors

riggertBig12Lache Seastrunk (Baylor), Shaun Lewis (Oklahoma State) and Ben Grogan (Oklahoma State) were named Big 12 Football Players of the Week by a panel of media that cover the Conference. Seastrunk (offense) and Lewis (defense) picked up their second career honor while Grogan (special teams) was recognized for the first time.

Big 12 Offensive Player of the Week
Lache Seastrunk, Baylor, RB, Jr, Temple, Texas

Lache Seastrunk ran 15 times for 172 yards and two touchdowns in Baylor’s 73-42 win over West Virginia. He averaged 11.5 yards per carry in a half of action as he did not play in the second period. It was Seastrunk’s ninth-career 100-yard rushing game and his eighth-consecutive – the nation’s longest active streak. The junior tallied an 80-yard TD in the first quarter, tying for the fourth-longest rush in program history. His 172 rushing yards were the 15th-most in program history as he now owns three of the top-15 single-game rushing totals at Baylor. Seastrunk leads the Big 12 with 147.2 yards per game on the ground and is second nationally.

Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week
Shaun Lewis, Oklahoma State, LB, Sr, Missouri City, Texas

Shaun Lewis forced a fumble that was recovered by the Cowboys, recovered a different fumble and led the team with eight tackles, including one for loss, in Oklahoma State’s 33-29 win over K-State.  He also ended the Wildcats’ comeback hopes with an interception late in the fourth quarter to preserve the win.

Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Week
Ben Grogan, Oklahoma State, K, Fr, Arlington, Texas

Ben Grogan helped Oklahoma State to a 33-29 win over K-State with his four field goals in a game that featured eight lead changes. He set OSU freshman records for field goals made and his 15 points scored by kicking.

— Big 12 Press Release —

Chiefs move to 5-0 as they rally to win at Tennessee

ChiefsBeing perfect is what matters most in the NFL, as Chiefs coach Andy Reid knows only too well.

No matter how ugly some of those wins may be.

Jamaal Charles scored a 1-yard touchdown with 6:23 left, and the Chiefs rallied to beat the Tennessee Titans 26-17 on Sunday.

”We are 5-0, and we’re not ashamed of that,” Reid said. ”We also know that we’ve got a ton of room to improve and it’s important that we continue to do that.”

The Chiefs (5-0) are off to their best start since 2003, when they won their first nine games. This win came despite blowing a 13-0 halftime lead in this early AFC showdown between these surprising teams bouncing back after losing seasons, and Charles called this a special win.

”I am speechless right now,” Charles said. ”This team is very blessed to be 5-0 right now. Nobody expected us to be 5-0.”

The Titans (3-2) couldn’t have been more out of synch in the first half with Ryan Fitzpatrick starting for Jake Locker sidelined with his sprained right hip. He missed his first five passes and went three-and-out on his first five series before guiding Tennessee to 17 straight points in the second half.

Charles put the Chiefs ahead to stay 20-17. He finished with 50 of his 108 yards on 22 carries coming in the fourth quarter on 11 carries. The Chiefs also intercepted Fitzpatrick twice in the final 6:14. Ryan Succop kicked four field goals, including a 48-yarder.

The Titans had one last chance needing to score twice and sent Rob Bironas out for a 32-yard field goal. But Bironas missed wide right, and time expired.

”The bottom line is we found a way back into that game and had an opportunity to go up by more than four and we didn’t do that,” Titans coach Mike Munchak said.

Now Kansas City heads home for a three-game stretch, though the Chiefs had plenty of support on the road in Nashville.

”I thought the fans controlled that lower bowl there and we heard them and we appreciate all that support that they were able to give us, especially down the stretch there,” Reid said.

The Chiefs and Titans came in tied atop the NFL with a plus-9 turnover margin, but it was Kansas City that forced three turnovers and turned those into 13 points. The Chiefs also had a goal-line stand at their own 1 late in the first half. The Titans forced two they managed to convert into a touchdown.

Kansas City dominated early with a 132-10 edge in total offense in the first quarter and was up 13-0 at halftime on a rainy day in Nashville. The goal-line stand also proved huge as the Chiefs not only stopped the Titans four times from their own 1 but drove for another field goal.

Fitzpatrick looked rusty in his first start since being in Buffalo last season, and his new teammates weren’t much help. Chris Johnson finished with only 17 yards rushing on 10 carries.

But Fitzpatrick outgained the Chiefs all by himself in the third quarter in keying the Titans’ rally. He flipped the ball to Johnson for a 49-yard TD. He also scrambled 9 yards for a TD giving the Titans a 17-13 lead early in the fourth quarter. The Titans also settled for a 22-yard field goal by Bironas after having first-and-goal in the third.

”We had to gear down and somebody had to make a play, stop the snowball from rolling downhill, and we did,” Chiefs linebacker Derrick Johnson said.

The Chiefs’ go-ahead drive was keyed by an unnecessary roughness flag on Titans linebacker Moises Fokou for hitting Alex Smith as the quarterback scrambled on third-and-5. Smith only picked up 2 yards and was hit at the sideline, and the flag gave the Chiefs first down.

”If you’re not sliding, to me, you’re not giving yourself up,” Munchak said of Smith. ”He wasn’t sliding.”

Marcus Cooper wrestled the ball away from Nate Washington with 6:14 left, and Quintin Demps picked off a pass that bounced off Titans receiver Kendall Wright with 2:39 left. Succop kicked field goals of 33 and 48 yards after each to pad the lead.

Cooper put the Chiefs up 7-0 when he recovered the ball in the end zone after the ball brushed up against Titans blocker Damian Williams before dribbling to the end zone – Tennessee’s first turnover this season.

— Associated Press —

Western soccer gives up second half goal and falls 1-0 at Northeastern State

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western soccer team played hard but gave up a second half goal falling 1-0 against the Northeastern State University RiverHawks on Sunday afternoon. The Griffons had seven shots with Bailey Dervin leading the charge with three. MWSU falls to 2-8-1 overall and 0-4 in MIAA play.

Despite getting out shot 15-2 in the first half Sarah Lyle and the Griffons were able to go into halftime tied at zero. Lyle had eight saves in the half.

In the second half the Griffons had more offense but still got out shot 8-5. In the 78th minute the RiverHawks Elizabeth Cudjoe scored her fifth goal of the season on a penalty kick. With the victory Northeastern State improves to 8-2 overall and 2-2 in MIAA play.

In the game the RiverHawks out shot MWSU 23-7 with an 11-3 advantage in shots on goal. Cudjoe had five shots with two on goal.

The Griffons return to action on Friday, October 11 with a home contest against the Washburn Ichabods. Game time is set for 7:00 pm in Spratt Stadium.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Northwest soccer gets shutout at Central Oklahoma

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State women’s soccer team was shutout 3-0 by Central Oklahoma Sunday, as the team finished up a three game road trip.

UCO notched three goals in the first half coming in the 14th, 23rd and 31st minutes to take control of the match.

The Bearcats managed four shots in the first half and two in the second half but could not capitalize on any of them as they fell to the Bronchos 3-0.

Northwest returns home Friday to take on Emporia State (5-4-2, 2-1-2) in a MIAA matchup with kickoff scheduled for 3 pm on Bearcat Pitch.

— Northwest Sports Information —

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