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Audio from Chiefs Training Camp – Friday, July 26

ChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs practiced as a full squad for the first time Friday afternoon at Missouri Western State University as training camp continued in St. Joseph.  A record-setting crowd of 3,841 came out to MWSU to watch the Chiefs practice.  It’s the largest opening day crowd and largest crowd at a training camp practice that wasn’t held inside Spratt Stadium.

Click the links below to hear audio from head coach Andy Reid, QB Alex Smith and No. 1 overall pick Eric Fisher.  Fisher was in camp Friday after signing his contract in the morning.

Head Coach Andy Reid

QB Alex Smith

OT Eric Fisher

Missouri Western baseball adds three more junior college players

riggertMissouriWesternMissouri Western head baseball coach Charles “Buzz” Verduzco announces the signing of three more student-athletes for the 2014 season. Junior college transfers Charles Koehler, III (Jefferson College) from Lake St. Louis, Mo., Michael Yeager (Johnson County CC) from Kansas City, Mo. and Hunter Weiss (Mt. Hood CC) from Portland, Org. join Matthew Russell, Grant Woods, Derek Rottinghaus, Tyler Sanders, Jonathan Temenak and Tyler Tuepker on next years squad.

Koehler is a 6-2 left handed pitcher who comes to MWSU from Jefferson College in Hillsboro, Mo. He played his high school baseball at St. Dominic in O’Fallon, Mo. In

high school he was an All-Conference pitcher and an honorable mention All-Conference utility player. During his senior season he had 4-0 record in 26 innings pitched. He had a 1.88 ERA with 26 strikeouts. In his two seasons at Jefferson College he went 6-1 with a 2.24 ERA with three shutouts in 68.1 innings pitched. He had 61 strikeouts and walked just 21. He plans on majoring in management at MWSU.

“CJ had an impressive career at Jefferson College,” stated Coach Verduzco. “Not often do you land someone of his caliber, especially as a left handed pitcher. We are fortunate to have him in our program and he will help solidify the front end of our staff.”

Yeager is a 5-9 catcher who comes to MWSU from Johnson County CC in Overland Park, Kan. Yeager played his high school baseball at Staley High School in Kansas City, Mo. While at Johnson County he was an All-Conference performer as well as a team captain and the most valuable player which was selected by his coaches. As a freshman he hit .417 with 43 hits and 14 RBI and has a sophomore he hit .307 with 20 RBI. While in high school he was a two time All-State selection as well as All-Metro. As a

junior he had the highest batting average in the state at .611. He plans on majoring in sports management at Missouri Western.

“Michael is coming off two excellent seasons at Johnson County CC,” commented Coach Verduzco. “He is an outstanding defensive catcher with a plus arm that can control our opponent’s running game. Our pitching staff will definitely benefit his high energy “take charge” approach.”

Weiss is a 6-1 outfielder who comes to the Griffons from Mt. Hood CC in Gresham, Ore. He played his high school baseball at Central Catholic in Portland, Ore. While at Mt. Hood he was a second team All-NWAACC Southern Region Outfielder and a Gold Glove NWAACC Southern Region selection. In his two seasons he hit .279 with 58 runs scored, 85 hits, nine doubles, one home run and 42 RBI. In high school he was an first team All-Conference performer both in the outfield and as a pitcher. He plans on majoring in business administration at Missouri Western.

“Hunter has been the model of consistency while competing at Mt. Hood CC in Oregon,” said Coach Verduzco. “He will add plus defensive to our outfield and will be a very solid offensive player.”

— MWSU Sports Information —

Shields shuts down White Sox as Royals win 5-1

RoyalsJames Shields tossed seven shutout innings and rookie David Lough homered and drove in another run to lead the Kansas City Royals to a 5-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox on Friday night.

The Royals (49-51) have won four straight and six of eight since the All-Star break. The White Sox (40-60) have lost four of five.

Shields (5-7) allowed eight hits and walked two but faced only one real scoring threat, working out of a bases-loaded jam in the sixth inning.

The veteran right-hander, in his first season in Kansas City, has pitched better than his won-loss record might indicate. He lowered his ERA to 3.09 and has been especially effective on the road, where he improved to 4-3 with a 2.50 ERA in 12 starts.

Chicago starter Jose Quintana (5-3) also pitched well but allowed two runs on six hits in seven innings to pick up the loss.

Lough led off the top of the third inning with a home run into the right-field bullpen to give the Royals a 1-0 lead. That’s where the score stayed until the seventh, when the Royals stretched the lead to 2-0 on a sacrifice fly by Miguel Tejada that scored Salvador Perez, who led off the inning with a double.

The White Sox’s best threat against Shields came in the sixth, when they loaded the bases with two outs. But catcher Josh Phegley grounded into a fielder’s choice to third base on the first pitch to end the inning.

The Sox finally got on the board in the eighth on a solo homer by Conor Gillaspie, but the Royals added three insurance runs in the ninth on run-scoring hits by Lorenzo Cain and Mike Moustakas, and a sacrifice fly by Lough.

— Associated Press —

Minor outduels Wainwright as Cardinals lose series opener at Atlanta

CardsMike Minor allowed only one run to give Atlanta’s depleted rotation a lift, Jason Heyward homered, and the Braves beat Adam Wainwright and the St. Louis Cardinals 4-1 in a matchup of division leaders on Friday night.

Minor (10-5) gave up four hits with no walks in seven innings. His sharp performance came two days after Tim Hudson was lost for the season with a broken right ankle.

The Atlanta rotation also is without left-hander Paul Maholm, who isn’t on the disabled list but is expected to miss at least one start because of a bruised left wrist.

Wainwright (13-6), the NL leader in wins, took his first loss since a 2-1 decision to Texas on June 23.

Yadier Molina gave St. Louis a 1-0 lead with his eighth homer in the second inning. The Braves answered with two runs in the bottom of the inning.

Wainwright allowed four runs, three earned, on seven hits and one walk in seven innings.

Minor, who became the first Braves pitcher to reach 10 wins, lowered his ERA to 2.89. His strong start was especially important after Hudson’s season ended when he was injured on Wednesday night against the Mets.

The Braves took a 2-1 lead with four hits off Wainwright in the second. Brian McCann doubled, moved to third on Dan Uggla’s single and scored on Chris Johnson’s single to left field. Minor added a single with two outs to drive in Uggla.

Heyward pushed the lead to 3-1 with his eighth homer, a one-out shot to left field, in the fifth.

With one out in the seventh and Johnson on first base following his second hit, Joey Terdoslavich pinch-hit for Minor and hit a grounder to shortstop Pete Kozma, who threw wild toward second base. Johnson scored on the error.

Jordan Walden pitched a perfect eighth inning before Craig Kimbrel recorded the final three outs for his 29th save.

Heyward, sprinting toward the infield from right field, made a diving catch to take a hit away from David Freese in the fifth inning. Heyward rolled and came up holding the ball as Minor slapped his glove in approval on the mound.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City signs free agent CB Conroy Black

ChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Friday that the club has signed cornerback Conroy Black.

Black (6-0, 187) originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Oakland Raiders on May 11, 2012. He spent the 2012 preseason with Oakland before being released, then was added to the Detroit Lions practice squad roster on Sept. 18. Black was released by the Lions on May 16, 2013.

The Pembroke Pines, Fla., native played defensive back at Utah for two years (2010-11). He saw action in 26 games (13 starts) for the Utes, recording 58 tackles (35 solo), one tackle for loss, 1.0 sack, seven passes defensed and five interceptions.

Prior to playing at Utah he attended Fullerton College where he was a team captain. Born in Jamaica, Black prepped at Everglades High School in Miramar, Fla.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

No. 1 overall pick Eric Fisher signs with Chiefs

ChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs agreed to terms with No. 1 overall pick Eric Fisher on Friday, ensuring that the big right tackle out of Central Michigan will be in training camp with plenty of time to prepare for the season.

A person familiar with the situation, speaking on condition of anonymity because the team had not announced details, told The Associated Press the contract will be for five years. The deal is expected to be in the $22 million range, which would put it on par with the two previous No. 1 picks to have been signed since the NFL instituted a new rookie wage scale with the most recent collective-bargaining agreement.

Fisher was expected to report to training camp Friday in St. Joseph, in time for the team’s first full-squad workout later in the day. He attended the Chiefs’ entire offseason program, but missed three days of practice earlier this week involving his fellow rookies.

Fisher and another tackle, Texas A&M’s Luke Joeckel, were widely considered the top offensive linemen available in this year’s draft. The Chiefs opted to nab Fisher with the first No. 1 pick in franchise history, securing a bookend tackle for new quarterback Alex Smith.

“Watching three tackles come off in the first four picks, I think people knew they would go high, but nobody was expecting that,” Chiefs chairman Clark Hunt said after the draft. “It shows that a lot of teams know that you have to win in the trenches, and we certainly feel that way.”

While he may not be as polished as Joeckel, who went second overall to Jacksonville, Fisher is considered to be more athletic and the Chiefs believe he has a greater upside.

Most project him as a future left tackle, but the 6-foot-7, 306-pound Fisher will start off on the right side because the Chiefs opted to give veteran Branden Albert the franchise tag.

Albert will play this season under a one-year deal worth about $9.3 million, but his future beyond that is uncertain. The Chiefs have expressed interest in signing the durable left tackle to a long-term deal, but the two sides have so far been unable to close a wide gap in negotiations.

That means that Fisher could eventually replace Albert in protecting Smith’s blind side in a revamped offense under new coach Andy Reid.

“I just try to play football. I know how to play football, and do what I’ve done the last four years, because that’s what has gotten me here,” Fisher said during offseason workouts.

“I’m just trying to play offensive line,” he said. “I really love everything that comes with it. It’s a different territory in there. It’s a very similar system to what I ran in college.”

Fisher is only the third offensive tackle picked No. 1 overall in the modern NFL draft.

“We were fortunate to have a draft where there was a number of offensive linemen who are first-round-caliber guys,” Reid said after the draft. “That’s what we need here, and we have a good nucleus now.”

The team has now signed all eight draft selections from the 2013 draft class.

— Associated Press —

Royals win third straight game against Baltimore

RoyalsJeremy Guthrie pitched six solid innings and Billy Butler homered and the Kansas City Royals beat the Baltimore Orioles 7-1 on Thursday.

The Royals, who limped into the All-Star break with five consecutive defeats, went 5-2 on the homestand against the Orioles and AL Central Division-leading Detroit Tigers.

Guthrie (10-7), who won 47 games in five seasons with the Orioles, allowed six hits over six innings. He gave up one run, while striking out five and walking one.

Guthrie went 3-1 in July and his 10 victories are one shy of his season high, set in 2010 with the Orioles.

The Royals had 10 hits, including two each by rookie David Lough and Jarrod Dyson. Lough drove in a pair of runs with singles in the first and fifth innings. Alex Gordon also had two RBIs with a triple in the fifth and a sacrifice fly in the second.

Butler homered, his ninth of the season, in the seventh inning off Francisco Rodriguez, who was making his Orioles’ debut after being acquired in a trade Tuesday with Milwaukee.

Orioles right-hander Miguel Gonzalez (8-4) lasted just 4 2-3 innings, his shortest outing of the season and snapping his streak of eight straight quality starts. Gonzalez, who lost for only the second time since May 21, allowing a season-high six runs and eight hits, one walk and a hit batter, while striking out none.

The Royals scored three runs in the first two innings, all with two out. Salvador Perez and Lough contributed RBI singles in the first. Gordon’s fly to center in the second scored Chris Getz, who had doubled and moved to third on Dyson’s bunt single.

The Royals’ three-run fifth included Dyson scoring on Gordon’s triple, while Eric Hosmer and Lough added RBI singles.

Henry Urrutia tripled with two out in the fifth and scored on Brian Roberts’ double for the Orioles’ run.

Baltimore catcher Matt Wieters singled in his first two at-bats for his fifth consecutive multi-hit game and extended his hitting streak to seven games.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis completes sweep of Philadelphia with 3-1 win

CardsLance Lynn knew from the first pitch on Thursday that his recent struggles were over for at least one game.

The St. Louis right-hander bounced back from a frustrating stretch to allow one run over seven innings and the Cardinals scored three times in the third inning of a 3-1 win over the Philadelphia Phillies.

Matt Carpenter, Jon Jay and Matt Adams drove in runs for the Cardinals, who have won seven of nine.

Philadelphia has lost five in a row, tying a season high. The Phillies also dropped five straight from June 7-12.

St. Louis, which swept the three-game set, has the most wins in the majors at 62 and is a season-high 25 games over .500.

Lynn (12-5) had dropped four of his previous five decisions and was 3-4 with a 6.32 ERA in his past eight starts.

”I knew I had to be a lot better than I had been,” Lynn said. ”It was bad.”

Lynn came out against the Phillies with an aggressive mindset, which paid immediate dividends. He realized quickly that he had rediscovered his early season groove.

”I had good stuff early on and I could feel it,” Lynn said. ”I knew I had it from the get-go. I was able to attack with my fastball and able to get into a rhythm.”

Lynn, who was 8-1 with a 2.76 ERA in his first 12 starts, gave up just five hits against the slumping Phillies, who have scored just nine runs during the five-game skid. He struck out six and walked four.

Lynn’s turnaround came at a perfect time. St. Louis is set to embark on an 11-game road swing beginning Friday in Atlanta.

Lynn, whose last win came on July 7, retired eight batters in a row from the fourth through seventh innings. He set the side down in order in the fifth and sixth on a combined 23 pitches.

”That’s what we’ve been hoping to see,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. ”He kept his focus and he still maintained his energy. He had impressive depth to his sinker.”

Closer Edward Mujica picked up his 30th save in 32 opportunities. He struck out two and is tied with Pittsburgh’s Jason Grilli for the most saves in the NL. Trevor Rosenthal pitched a scoreless eighth for the Cardinals.

Mujica, who converted his first 21 save opportunities this season, needed to 14 pitches to nail down the victory.

”At the beginning of the season, they gave me the ball in the seventh inning,” Mujica said. ”I never thought about being a closer. This is unbelievable for me.”

St. Louis scored three times on four hits off Philadelphia starter Kyle Kendrick (9-7) in the third.

Carpenter drove in Pete Kozma with a one-out single. Jay followed with an RBI triple and Adams added a run-scoring single.

St. Louis, which leads Pittsburgh by 2 1/2 games in the NL Central, won five of six games on its homestand.

”You show up every day wanting to play and you end up with good results,” Carpenter said. ”This was a big day for us.”

Kendrick allowed three runs and five hits over six innings. He gave up just one hit in five of the innings, but the third inning was costly.

”One bad inning can lose a game for you,” Kendrick said. ”It was a quality start, but I had to pitch than that tonight and I didn’t do it.”

Erik Kratz drove in the Phillies’ run with a single in the fourth.

Philadelphia outfielder Steve Susdorf grounded into a double play in the seventh in his major league debut. He was recalled earlier in the day to replace Domonic Brown, who was placed on the seven-day concussion disabled list.

The Phillies, who fell to 9-19 against NL Central foes, remain eight games behind Atlanta in the NL East.

”At times, we have trouble putting anything on the board,” Philadelphia manager Charlie Manuel said. ”We got some hits, but we didn’t have any real good chances.”

— Associated Press —

Kansas City releases WR Mardy Gilyard

ChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Thursday that the club has waived wide receiver Mardy Gilyard.

Gilyard (6-1, 187) joined the Chiefs on Feb. 12, 2013 after stints with the New York Jets (2011-12), Philadelphia Eagles (2012) and St. Louis Rams (2010-11).  He owns eight receptions for 78 yards (9.8 avg.), two punt returns for 15 yards (7.5 avg.) and 16 kickoff returns for 356 yards (22.3 avg.).

Gilyard originally entered the NFL as a fourth-round draft pick (99th overall) of St. Louis in 2010. He was released by the Rams on Sept. 3, 2011 and acquired by the Jets the following day for his first go-round with the club.

After being released by the Jets on Sept. 10, 2011, Gilyard signed with Philadelphia on Jan. 6, 2012. He rejoined the Jets on Nov. 28, 2012 before being released on Dec. 24, 2012.

Gilyard was an All-American receiver at the University of Cincinnati.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

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