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

Kansas City gets pounded by Baltimore in series opener

RoyalsThe Baltimore Orioles got production from throughout their lineup, while Scott Feldman shut down the Kansas City Royals offense.

 

Chris Davis and J.J. Hardy each drove in three runs and the Orioles defeated the Kansas City Royals 9-2 on Monday night to extend their winning streak to a season-high five games.

 

Davis, who leads the majors with 97 RBIs, drove in a pair of runs with a sixth-inning double and another with a sacrifice fly in the first inning.

 

“I think it’s huge anytime you swing the bats well at the beginning of the game,” Davis said. “It puts some pressure on the opposing pitcher and gives you more opportunities.

 

“The way we’re swinging the bats we know that if one guy doesn’t do it, the next will do it. We’re getting on base, running the bases well and we’re taking advantage of every opportunity.”

 

Hardy homered, his 17th of the season, in the four-run sixth with Davis aboard. He picked up another RBI in the third when Davis scored on his ground out.

 

“Getting a lot of base runners and getting some timely hits, it’s a good combination,” Hardy said.

 

“We had a lot of opportunities to score more, too. We got a lot of guys on-base early, with hits and walks, Nate (McLouth) leading it off sets the tone. And he’s stolen 25 bases, too. That puts pressure on the pitcher to be quicker to the plate which helps the hitters and it puts pressure on the defense.”

 

The Orioles’ 18-hit attack matched their season high and included seven players with multi-hit games, including three each by rookie Henry Urrutia, Nick Markakis and Hardy. McLouth reached base five times — two hits and three walks.

 

“Henry had some great at-bats,” Orioles manager Buck Showalter said. “J.J. had the homer. Nate was on base all night. Chris settled back in pretty good. It was good offense all night.”

 

Feldman (2-1), who was acquired in a July 2 trade from the Chicago Cubs, was the beneficiary of the offense, picking up the victory.

 

“It’s a great way to open the second half, clicking on all cylinders,” Feldman said. “The offense has been great. The defense has gotten the job done and now the pitching is getting it going.”

 

Feldman limited the Royals to five singles and two runs over eight innings.

 

“I was just throwing strikes,” Feldman said. “I kind of got away from it in the fourth inning and walked some guys, then we got back to it, and let the defense do the work behind me.”

 

Royals manager Ned Yost summed up the defeat in four words: “It was a clunker.”

 

Wade Davis (4-9) took the loss, giving up four runs, two unearned, in 2 2/3 innings and seven hits and three walks before being replaced by Luis Mendoza.

 

Davis has lost his past four starts with a 10.91 ERA in that span, giving up 21 runs and 24 hits and 12 walks. Davis has only one win in his past 11 starts.

 

“I’m just inconsistent,” Davis said. “I’ve got to get deep in games. I fell behind in the count too much, a leadoff walk.”

 

Rookie David Lough drove in one Kansas City run and scored the other. His single in the fourth scored Salvador Perez. Lough scored in the third on Alcides Escobar’s sacrifice fly.

 

Mike Moustakas committed a fielding error in the first inning, ending the Royals’ streak at 11 games without an error, which matched a club record. Moustakas’ error on Manny Machado’s hopper led to two unearned runs.

 

“I just missed it,” Moustakas said. “No excuses for it. It’s routine as it gets. It’s a 5-4-3 double play and I just didn’t make the play. That’s an additional 20 pitches for Wade. It’s going to sting for a while.”

 

— Associated Press —

Mustangs get blown out on the road at Ozark

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs suffered their third consecutive road loss Sunday as they were dominated in Springfield against the Ozark General, 12-3.

The loss also snapped St. Joe’s summer college baseball teams two-game win streak after back-to-back home wins Friday and Saturday.  They fall to 26-20 this season and 21-20 in the MINK League.

Ozark broke a scoreless tie with two runs in the fourth inning and then they broke the game open in the sixth.

The General knocked Mustangs’ starter Jared Hawkins out of the game and exploded for nine runs to take an 11-0 lead.

St. Joseph fell behind 12-0 before finally getting on the scoreboard in the ninth inning when Lucas Powers hit a two-out, two-run single and Joe Koerper added an RBI single for the final margin.

Koerper, Brandon Huske and Griff Gordon had two hits each for the Mustangs.

Hawkins lasted 5.2 innings and allowed five runs on nine hits.  He struck out three and walked one batter.

St. Joe will close out its regular season Monday when they travel to Chillicothe.  The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m. and will be broadcast on ESPN 1550 AM and here on StJosephPost.com.

Royals lose series finale to Detroit Sunday

RoyalsMiguel Cabrera is so locked in at the plate that he’s even hitting tough pitches.

Cabrera homered on a pitch that was way inside to help Detroit beat Kansas City 4-1 on Sunday and avoid being swept.

James Shields thought the pitch was way inside to Cabrera. So did Kansas City Royals manager Ned Yost.

It made no difference was. Cabrera knocked it 387 feet down the left-field line for his 31st home run.

”That pitch was way, way inside,” Yost said. ”That ball was five inches inside. You’ve got to tip your cap to him for keeping that ball fair.”

Said Shields, ”That’s why he’s the best hitter in the game.”

Cabrera, who is second in the league to Chris Davis of the Baltimore Orioles, drove the 1-1 pitch out in the first inning.

”That ball is in on his hands, he hit it hard and kept it fair,” Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. ”He’s just an amazing hitter and we know that.”

Cabrera,the reigning AL MVP, leads the majors with 96 RBIs and 134 hits. Cabrera’s home run was his 352nd, passing Dick Allen and tying Ellis Burks for 86th on the all-time list.

”I’m not looking for it (inside),” Cabrera said of the pitch. ”I just reacted.”

Doug Fister (8-5) picked up the victory with six strong innings, yielding a run, while allowing six hits and striking out five and walking one.

”It was a constant battle from the first pitch,” Fister said. ”I’ve been on the mound (over the break), but I was shaking off rust and getting back out there, but I felt great from the first pitch to the last.

”The biggest focus was to get the ball down and around the knees. We executed with that on the better side and that’s going to continue to be our focus.”

Miguel Tejada tied it in the second with his third home run and the 307th of his career, but that was the only run the Royals could muster off Fister and three relievers. Tejada took an 0-1 Fister pitch out to left.

Andy Dirks broke the tie with a home run with one out in the fifth to straightaway center, just eluding Jarrod Dyson’s leap at the wall.

It was a two-game swing in the standings for the Tigers. A Royals’ victory would have pulled them within five of the division leaders, but instead they are seven games back.

”You’re always mad when you get a chance to sweep a team and don’t do it,” Dyson said. ”We’re just trying to creep back into it.”

The Tigers tacked on a run in the seventh. They loaded the bases with none out on Prince Fielder, Victor Martinez and Jhonny Peralta singles. Peralta’s single was off Shields’ inner right thigh, but he remained in the game after being checked out by the trainer.

”It hurt really bad,” Shields said.

Brayan Pena, a former Royal, brought home Fielder with a sacrifice fly to center.

Shields (4-7), who has won only one of 10 home starts, took the loss, giving up three runs on nine hits, while striking out six in seven innings.

”Anytime you give up three runs in seven innings, you’ve done a good job” Yost said.

Pena contributed another sacrifice fly in the ninth off Kelvin Herrera, this one scoring Peralta, who doubled with one out and stopped at third on Dirks’ single to left.

Joaquin Benoit worked the ninth to log his ninth save in as many opportunities.

Fister plunked Salvador Perez with a pitch in the third and leads the majors with 14 hit batters.

— Associated Press —

Wainwright wins 13th, St. Louis edges Padres 3-2

CardsWatching the top of the ninth inning from the dugout, St. Louis Cardinals ace Adam Wainwright thought he’d played the role of a ”nervous dad.”

”Like when I watch my friends do something, I’m always more nervous than when I do it,” Wainwright said.

”When I watch my daughters, even at ballet or something, I’m more nervous than if I was out there doing ballet.”

Allen Craig’s game-ending leaping catch high at the left field fence preserved a 3-2 victory over the San Diego Padres on Sunday.

Wainwright became the first NL pitcher to reach 13 wins.

The Cardinals have won nine of 12. The Padres have lost 19 of 24.

Craig has 12 hits and six RBIs during a seven-game hitting streak for the Cardinals, who took two of three in both series against the Padres this season.

He’s a confident defender, too, and never thought pinch hitter Jedd Gyorko’s drive with two on and two out was going out of the park.

The glove work prevented at least an extra-base hit that would have given the Padres the lead, and preserved Edward Mujica’s 28th save in 30 chances.

”Obviously, it came off the bat good,” Craig said. ”I don’t know if he hit it good enough. Obviously, it wasn’t enough.”

Gyorko agreed with Wainwright’s assessment that he just got under the ball a little. He hadn’t viewed a replay, and didn’t want to, either.

”No. It was a good play,” Gyorko said. ”That’s how the game goes sometimes.”

The St. Louis defense turned three double plays behind Wainwright (13-5), who allowed two runs with seven strikeouts and worked around two walks. The Padres got the leadoff man on base seven times but he minimized the impact.

”He got tough with guys on base, no doubt about it,” Padres manager Bud Black said. ”He’s a veteran pitcher with a lot of know-how.

”We had good swings against an All-Star pitcher. To a man, we fought him. He knew it.”

Yonder Alonso singled three times with an RBI for the Padres. Eric Stults (8-8) allowed three runs and eight hits in six innings, stranding two runners in the second and fifth, falling short in a bid to win three straight starts for the first time in his career.

”This is a team where they get guys on base and they get in kind of a swing mode, they want to score quick,” Stults said. ”That third inning got away a little bit.”

Wainwright matched his season high for walks after entering with a NL-low 15 in 146 2-3 innings. He had only one perfect inning but got key outs with breaking balls and struck out Everth Cabrera with a man on third to end the seventh.

Wainwright is 5-2 with a 1.47 ERA against the Padres after beating them for the second time this season.

The first four Cardinals reached safely in the third capped by David Freese’s two-run double when center fielder Alexi Amarista missed a diving catch and the ball went to the wall.

Freese was thrown out at third on strong relays from right fielder Will Venable and Cabrera and the Cardinals had just one more runner in scoring position the rest of the way.

Matt Carpenter opened the third with a double off the base of the wall in right-center for his second straight hit and leads the majors with 39 multi-hit games.

Cabrera led off the game with an opposite-field double, a chopper down the third-base line that Wainwright called a ”doink fest,” and scored on Alonso’s two-out hit.

The Padres cut the deficit to a run in the sixth on a double by Carlos Quentin, another Alonso hit and a double-play ball.

— Associated Press —

St. Joseph rolls past Kansas City to win final home game

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs won their second consecutive game Saturday night as they closed out their home schedule with an 11-3 victory over the Kansas City Monarchs.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team is now 26-19 and they stay 21-19 in the MINK League because it was a non-league game.

The Mustangs use a seven-run third inning to break open a scoreless game and they added two runs in each of the fourth and fifth innings to cruise to the win.

Zac Johnson led St. Joseph with four hits, while Lucas Powers and Shane O’Connell each went 3-for-5.

O’Connell and Jeremy Monty had two RBI each, whiel Joe Koerper scored three runs.

Jonathan McCann earned the win for the Mustangs as he went 5.1 innings and allowed three runs on seven hits.  He struck out three and didn’t walk a batter.

St. Joe is back on the road Sunday as they play a 7:00 p.m. game at Ozark.

Kansas City defeats Verlander, Detroit for second straight win

RoyalsMike Moustakas was in a slump and Justin Verlander, of all people, helped him snap out of it.

Salvador Perez drove in three runs and Moustakas went 3 for 4 with a game-winning home run to lead the Kansas City Royals to a 6-5 victory over the Detroit Tigers and Verlander.

Moustakas was hitless in 10 at-bats and in a 3-for-20 slide. His home run to right in the fifth snapped a 5-5 tie, while the three-hit game was his first since May 8.

”There’s a great pitcher on the mound and he doesn’t make too many mistakes,” Moustakas said. ”I got a pitch I could handle and didn’t miss it.”

Verlander (10-7) had not lost to the Royals since Sept. 9, 2009, but gave up six runs, five earned, on eight hits and four walks in 5 2-3 innings.

”It was not good at all,” Verlander said. ”I walked guys and they scored runs. I wasn’t able to execute. I was just all over. I wasn’t in sync. I’ve got to find it. I had three or four games before the All-Star break where I thought I had it back, but I didn’t feel in sync tonight. Hopefully I’ll get it back.”

It was the seventh time in 21 starts that Verlander failed to make it into the sixth inning.

”I would say over the course of the season up to this point, and there’s still a lot of season left, his performance hasn’t been quite as consistent as in the past,” Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. ”It’s just not what you expect of him, which is a little unfair because of what you expect of him.”

Perez drove in a run in the first with a sacrifice fly and stroked a two-run double in the third.

Jeremy Guthrie (9-7) picked up the victory, surrendering five runs on 10 hits and two walks in six innings.

”The bullpen won the game despite me trying to give it away,” Guthrie said.

Aaron Crow, the fourth of five Kansas City pitchers, pitched out of danger in the eighth inning. Alex Avila led off with a single, his third hit, and pinch hitter Don Kelly walked. After Austin Jackson bunted them both over, Crow retired Torii Hunter and Miguel Cabrera on ground balls to third base to strand them.

”I’m trying to put everything behind me and they both hit balls right at Moose (Moustakas),” Crow said. ”I got the ball down on Cabrera and he hit it on the ground. You don’t want to walk him to load the bases with Prince (Fielder) on-deck.”

Hunter and Cabrera are a combined 0 for 14 off Crow.

”We were not going to give in to Cabrera,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”We’d either walk him or make perfect pitches. Crow made the perfect pitches.”

Greg Holland worked the ninth to collect his 24th save in 26 chances, although he yielded a one-out double to Victor Martinez off the right-field wall.

”Soon as he hit it, I was praying it would stay in the park,” Yost said. ”I thought it had a chance to go out. I’m just glad it didn’t.”

Martinez stood at the plate for a couple of seconds to admire his work before taking off and just making it to second.

”I thought I had that ball and then I saw it go down,” Martinez said.

Fielder and Martinez stroked RBI-singles in the first as the Tigers jumped out to a 2-0 lead.

The Royals seized a 5-3 lead in the fourth when Chris Getz drove in a run with a fielder’s choice grounder, while Verlander walked Eric Hosmer with the bases loaded.

Avila drove in two runs with a two-out fifth inning single to tie the score at 5-all.

Getz, who was recalled Friday from Triple-A Omaha, suffered a mild medial strain of his left knee in the fifth inning while trying to field Fielder’s smash grounder. He was replaced by Elliot Johnson. Yost said Getz is ”not a DL (disabled list) situation, more like a day-to-day situation.”

— Associated Press —

Cardinals can’t overcome slow start in loss to San Diego

CardsAfter three perfect innings, Edinson Volquez barely qualified for the decision. The San Diego Padres’ bullpen picked up their starter by silencing the league’s top offense.

Nick Vincent, Dale Thayer, Luke Gregorson and Huston Street worked an inning apiece after Volquez (7-8) faded at the end of a five-inning outing in a 5-3 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday night.

”Tough team, no doubt about that,” manager Bud Black said. ”Look at the batting average, RBIs, what they do with runners in scoring position.

”Four no-hit innings. Outstanding.”

Street was perfect in the ninth for his 16th save in 17 chances after Carlos Quentin’s RBI double off Trevor Rosenthal in the ninth put the Padres up by two runs. The Cardinals entered the game leading the league with a .278 average but managed just a pair of walks the last four innings.

”We have a really good offense and sometimes it’s just not going to happen for you,” said St. Louis’ Allen Craig, who had a two-run single.

Lance Lynn (11-5) lost for the fourth time in five starts, allowing four runs in five innings.

Manager Mike Matheny said Lynn ”just never had a feel for his fastball,” and took note of ”body language” and ponderous pacing.

”He’s had a couple weird starts and when those start to compound you’ve got to stop and regroup, and it didn’t look like he was able to do that tonight,” Matheny said. ”It was pretty slow and it was talked about, but you also don’t rush a guy when he doesn’t have a good feel for his fastball.

”That wasn’t how we drew it up.”

The only run for the Cardinals came on 29-year-old rookie Brock Peterson’s RBI groundout in his first major league at-bat after getting called up to replace injured Matt Holliday.

Jedd Gyorko, Everth Cabrera and Nick Hundley added an RBI apiece for San Diego, which had lost 19 of 23.

A sellout crowd of 45,288 showed up in 92-degree heat, enticed by Red Schoendienst replica jersey giveaways. The 90-year-old Cardinals Hall of Famer was honored with a video tribute before the third inning as he watched the game from a private box.

The Padres had nine base runners the first three innings while taking a 4-0 lead, scoring twice in the third on a run-scoring wild pitch on a 2-2 pitch against Hundley followed by Hundley’s broken-bat infield hit.

Volquez retired the first nine batters in order, then allowed three runs on four hits, two walks and two wild pitches in the fourth and fifth. He lost his previous two starts and hasn’t lasted longer than 5 1-3 innings his last three outings.

”It was tough,” Volquez said. ”They’ve got a pretty good lineup and there were a lot of foul balls, too. My pitching count was a little bit high.”

Lynn has been an 11-game winner prior to the All-Star break both years in the St. Louis rotation, benefiting this year from an offense averaging nearly six runs per start. He’s been out of sync lately, giving up 10 runs in 9 1-3 innings his last two starts, and worked very deliberately against the Padres.

”You’re going to go through phases when you don’t go as deep as you like and I’m in one of those phases right now,” Lynn said. ”Hopefully I’ll turn it around quick. A starter going five is not going to get it done, if that’s what you’re asking.”

— Associated Press —

Mustangs defeat Omaha 13-3 Friday to snap losing skid

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs won their final MINK League home game of the season Friday night as they defeated Omaha, 13-3.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team improves to 25-19 this season and 21-19 in league play.

Omaha jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the top of of the first inning off three hits.

Down 2-1 heading into the bottom of the third inning, the Mustangs scored six runs to take the lead for good.  The highlight of the inning came from Eric Swains as he hit a three-run home run for his second of the esason.

St. Joseph added six runs in the eighth to snap their four-game losing streak as the Mustangs had 17 total hits in the game.

St. Joe plays its final home game of the season Saturday as they host the Kansas City Monarchs at 7:00 p.m.

Santana, Royals blank Detroit in series opener

RoyalsErvin Santana allowed two singles in 7 1-3 innings and the Kansas City Royals beat the Detroit Tigers 1-0 on Friday night to snap a five-game losing streak.

Santana, who can be a free agent after the season and has been widely speculated to be traded before the July 31 deadline without a player clearing waivers, did not allow a runner to reach second base. He walked one and struck out six.

Santana (6-6), who was coming off his worst outing of the season, when he allowed eight runs on 10 hits in a July 11 loss at Cleveland, retired the first 10 Tigers before Torii Hunter’s one-out single in the fourth.

Kelvin Herrera, who was just recalled from Triple-A Omaha, replaced Santana in the eighth after he walked Jhonny Peralta with one out. Herrera retired Andy Dirks on a grounder and struck out Alex Avila looking.

Greg Holland worked a flawless ninth for his 23rd save in 25 opportunities, striking out one.

Alex Gordon led off the Royals’ first with a single to right, stole second with one out and scored on Billy Butler’s ground-ball single to center.

That was the only run Tigers right-hander Anibal Sanchez (7-7) would allow in six innings, but that was one too many.

Sanchez, who was making his third start since coming off the disabled list with a shoulder strain, left after 101 pitches, allowing four singles, walking five and striking out three.

The Royals loaded the bases with two outs in the sixth on Butler’s single and walks to Mike Moustakas and David Lough, but failed to score as Alcides Escobar struck out to end the inning.

The Royals are 4-2 against the American League Central Division-leading Tigers, with five of the games decided by two or less runs.

The Tigers were shut out for the seventh time this season.

— Associated Press —

Westbrook’s pitching and hitting lead St. Louis past San Diego

CardsJake Westbrook pitched 6 1-3 innings of two-run ball and contributed three hits, All-Star Matt Carpenter continued his strong season with three hits and three RBIs, and the St. Louis Cardinals beat the San Diego Padres 9-6 on Friday night.

A career .116 hitter, Westbrook had never had more than one hit in a game. The right-hander, who scored twice and had an RBI, surpassed his hit output for the year with two singles and a double in his three at-bats. That raised his batting from .100 to .217.

On the mound, Westbrook (6-4) scattered eight hits while striking out one and walking four.

After rookie Carlos Martinez allowed three runs in the ninth to make it a three-run game, All-Star Edward Mujica got the last two outs to record his 27th save in 29 chances.

Fellow All-Stars Carlos Beltran and Yadier Molina each drove in two runs for the Cardinals, with Beltran contributing two sacrifice flies and Molina a two-run double in the seventh.

St. Louis reached a season-best 22 games over .500 (58-36) and owns the best winning percentage in the majors (.617).

The Padres’ lone All-Star representative, Everth Cabrera, drove in two runs with a two-run single off Westbrook in the seventh. San Diego, which lost 18 of 22 to conclude the first half, fell to 15-32 on the road and 74-149 in St. Louis (6-19 at new Busch Stadium).

Former Cardinal Jason Marquis (9-5) lost his third straight. Marquis, who has not won since beating Arizona 6-4 on June 15, was touched for six runs on eight hits and three walks.

Marquis blanked the Cardinals the first two innings before Westbrook led off the third with a single to center. He later scored on Beltran’s sacrifice fly to center.

Two innings later, Westbrook started another rally when he doubled over right fielder Will Venable’s head to begin the fifth. Carpenter followed with an RBI double to the gap in left center and he scored on Beltran’s sacrifice fly one out later that made it 3-0.

The Cardinals broke it open and chased Marquis by scoring three times in the sixth. With the bases loaded and one out, Westbrook coaxed a single through the middle to drive in Matt Adams. Carpenter then drove home two more with an RBI single to center.

— Associated Press —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File