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St. Joseph extends win streak with 14-inning thriller over Nevada

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs won their fourth consecutive game Saturday night as they defeated Nevada, 2-1, in a 14-inning thriller.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team improves to 24-15 and 20-15 in the MINK League.

Nevada scored in the third inning to take a 1-0 lead and the game stayed that way until the eighth, when Mustangs’ shortstop Brandon Huske hit a two-out single to drive in Kyle Richards and tie the game.

Both bullpens kept the game 1-1 until the 14th inning when Lucas Powers and Zac Johnson each walked to start the inning.  Connor Foreman poped out to the third baseman and then Eric Swain drove in Powers with a single and give St. Joe a walk-off win.

Jarrod Miller earned the win in relief as he went five innings and allowed only four hits.  He struck out two and didn’t walk a batter.

Staten Jones started for St. Joseph and lasted 6.1 innings, giving up just one run on seven hits.

In all, the the Mustangs relievers of Miller, Jace Anderson, Blake Kolons and Aaron Baker held the Griffons scorless for the final 7.2 innings.  They combined to strick out 10 and didn’t walk a batter.

Swain and Huske each had three hits to lead St. Joseph, while Foreman and Joe Koerper added two each.

The Mustangs have Sunday off and will play at Clarinda Monday.  The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m. and will broadcast live on 680 KFEQ and here on StJosephPost.com.

Royals drop second straight game against Indians

RoyalsLonnie Chisenhall hit his first career grand slam, Scott Kazmir pitched into the seventh inning and the Cleveland Indians beat the Kansas City Royals 5-3 on Saturday night.

Chisenhall’s homer in the sixth broke open a 1-0 game and hit off the facing of the second deck in right field, landing in Kansas City’s bullpen.

Kazmir (5-4) allowed two runs in 6 1-3 innings for his first victory since June 21 as the Indians won for the fifth time in seven games.

Miguel Tejada’s RBI single in the seventh broke a streak of 22 consecutive scoreless innings for Kansas City, which has lost four in a row. Alcides Escobar’s infield hit with the bases loaded added two runs in the inning.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis’ rally comes up short against Cubs

CardsMatt Garza pitched into the seventh inning for his fifth consecutive win and Alfonso Soriano homered again, leading the Chicago Cubs to a 6-4 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday night.

Garza allowed a season-high 10 hits in 6 2-3 innings, but held the NL’s highest scoring offense to two runs while improving to 5-0 with a 1.24 ERA in his last six starts. With a handful of scouts from several contenders watching his every move, the right-hander struck out four and walked two.

Garza’s hot stretch has made him one of the top names on the market ahead of the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline. But he also is eligible for free agency after the season, adding a tricky element to the negotiations between any interested team and a Cubs franchise looking for more top-level prospects for its rebuilding project.

Jon Jay had four hits and Matt Adams went 2 for 4 for St. Louis, which had won six of seven, including a 3-2 victory in the second game of the four-game series on Friday night. Lance Lynn was knocked out in the fifth inning in his second-shortest outing of the season.

The Cardinals played without outfielder Matt Holliday, who left Thursday’s night’s 3-0 loss to Chicago due to tightness in his right hamstring. All-Star catcher Yadier Molina was out of the starting lineup on his 31st birthday, but he hit for Rob Johnson in the eighth and stayed in the game.

Molina reached on an error by right fielder Julio Borbon, loading the bases with one out. Matt Carpenter hit a sacrifice fly, trimming the Cubs’ lead to 6-3, but James Russell got Daniel Descalso to fly out to end the inning.

Kevin Gregg allowed Jay’s two-out RBI single in the ninth before retiring Pete Kozma with runners on the corners for his 17th save in 19 chances.

Tony Cruz started for St. Louis at catcher and singled in Adams in the second. But he also was called for interference during Chicago’s three-run rally in the bottom half, setting up Starlin Castro’s dribbler up the third base line for an RBI single.

Soriano drove Lynn’s first pitch of the third over the wall in center field for his 16th homer, extending the lead to 4-1. The slugger went 2 for 5 and is batting .350 (21 for 60) with nine homers and 19 RBIs in his last 15 games, increasing the likelihood that he could be dealt in the next couple weeks.

Garza (6-1) escaped a jam in the fourth and was in control until the Cardinals chased him with three hits in the seventh, including Allen Craig’s run-scoring single.

Garza received a standing ovation from the crowd of 42,240 as he trudged off the mound following Craig’s hit, but the pitcher slammed his glove on his right leg as he made his way to the dugout, upset with the hit by his last batter.

Matt Guerrier came in with two runners on and got Adams to fly out to end the inning.

Lynn (11-4) was charged with six runs, five earned, and a season-high 10 hits in 4 1-3 innings. The right-hander dropped to 5-2 with a 3.30 ERA in eight career appearances against the Cubs.

— Associated Press —

Mustangs win big at Sedalia Friday to avenge earlier loss

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs got some revenge at Sedalia Friday night.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team lost Tuesday against the Bombers, 13-1, but they turned the tables Friday with a 12-4 victory over Sedalia.

The Mustangs scored unearned runs in the first and fifth innings to take a 2-0 lead before the Bombers got one run back in the bottom of the fifth.

After that it was all St. Joseph.

Joe Koerper hit a three-run home run to cap off a six-run sixth inning and Brandon Huske hit another three-run homer to finish off a four-run seventh inning.

The Mustangs led 12-1 before Sedalia scored three runs in the eighth inning off St. Joe reliever Steve Moyers.

Brandon Simmons earned his first win of the season as he went seven innings and allowed just one run on five hits.  He struck out two and didn’t walk a batter.

Koerper finished the night 3-for-5 with four RBI, while Connor Foreman added three hits and Zac Johnson went 2-for-5.  Huske also had four runs batted in.

St. Joseph pulled within two games of Clarinda in the MINK League North standings after the A’s lost Friday to Joplin, 3-0.

The Mustangs are back at home Saturday as they host Nevada at 7:00 p.m.

Kansas City gets shutout in series opener at Cleveland

RoyalsCorey Kluber kept the Cleveland Indians in the game long enough to get to Kansas City’s bullpen.

Kluber pitched into the eighth inning and pinch hitter Michael Bourn had a big two-run double, leading the Indians to a 3-0 win over the Royals on Friday night.

Cleveland got its first hit of the game against Bruce Chen in the fifth inning, but Kluber and two relievers made sure a three-run seventh was enough. Carlos Santana had an RBI single before Bourn came up his clutch swing.

Kluber (7-5) allowed three hits and struck out eight in 7 2-3 innings. The right-hander, a bright spot in a rotation that’s struggled most of the season, worked out of a bases-loaded, one-out jam in the fifth.

”He certainly stays composed,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. ”For a young pitcher, that’s a big compliment.”

Joe Smith recorded the final out in the eighth and Cody Allen struck out Jarrod Dyson with the bases loaded for his second save. The five-hitter was Cleveland’s American League-leading 12th shutout.

Allen was subbing for regular closer Chris Perez, who had appeared in five of the previous six games. Perez was on the disabled list from May 27 to June 26 with a sore right shoulder and missed time in spring training because of the injury.

Allen knew before the game that Perez was unavailable but wasn’t sure if he would get the call in the ninth.

”I thought it was going to be Joe,” Allen said. ”I knew the possibility was there.”

Composure was also a key for Allen. After allowing two singles, he walked pinch hitter George Kottaras but struck out Dyson to end the 32-pitch inning.

”I was trying to make one good pitch at a time,” Allen said. ”Obviously, I didn’t want to get into a bases-loaded situation but that’s where I was.”

Chen pitched six innings of one-hit ball in his first start of the season. Santana’s leadoff double in the fifth was Cleveland’s only hit off Chen, who struck out four and walked one while throwing 97 pitches.

Cleveland’s lineup seemed to wake up after Chen was pulled. Tim Collins (2-4) gave up singles to All-Star Jason Kipnis and Nick Swisher to begin the seventh before being relieved by Aaron Crow.

Santana then lined a single to center. Dyson charged the ball and made a strong throw home but Kipnis slid around catcher Salvador Perez’s tag and touched the plate with his left hand.

Mark Reynolds, mired in a 2-for-31 slump this month, reached on a bunt hit to the left of the mound to load the bases. Bourn, batting for Ryan Raburn, then singled to right-center to give Cleveland a 3-0 lead.

Reynolds is known for putting up big home run and strikeout numbers, making the bunt quite the play at the time.

”That caught everybody on the Royals, in the stands, in the press box and me by surprise, but it might have won us a game,” Francona said.

Kluber got out of big trouble in the fifth. David Lough started the inning with a triple but held at third when Alcides Escobar grounded out to second. Elliot Johnson walked and stole second before Dyson walked.

Alex Gordon, who hit a grand slam off Kluber in Kansas City on July 2, struck out. Kluber fielded Eric Hosmer’s slow roller to the left of the mound and ran to first for the putout.

Kluber has been able to pitch out of several jams in his 15 starts in his first full season in the majors.

”I stepped back and took a deep breath,” he said. ”All I can do is calm down, execute pitches and get out of it.”

Gordon drew a one-out walk in the eighth. Kluber, who won for the fourth time in his last five decisions, was removed after striking out Hosmer and received a loud ovation from the crowd of 24,077.

Chen replaced struggling right-hander Luis Mendoza in the rotation. Chen was 3-0 with a 2.41 ERA in 19 relief appearances before being moved to the rotation.

”I did everything I could to help us win, but Kluber was just a little bit better,” Chen said ”Sometimes you have to give credit because he made some great pitches and pitched out of some tough situations.”

— Associated Press —

Beltran has three hits as Cardinals hang on to defeat Cubs, 3-2

CardsCarlos Beltran had a forgettable 2,000th game in the majors on Thursday. His 2,001st might stay with him for a while.

After going 0-for-4 with two strikeouts one day earlier at Wrigley Field, Beltran bounced back Friday with three hits – falling a home run short of the cycle – and an RBI to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to a 3-2 win over the Chicago Cubs.

”Yesterday wasn’t a good one and today was better, for sure,” said Beltran, who had a run-scoring triple, double and single. ”That’s baseball. Some days you feel like you come to the ballpark and you try and nothing works out your way, and today it seems like everything worked out my way.”

Beltran’s offense bolstered a second straight spot start for reliever-turned-starter Joe Kelly (1-3), who won his first game of the season.

”I just attacked with everything – slider, curve ball, change-up, four-seam, two-seam (fastball),” Kelly said. ”When you throw a couple of those for strikes, you make it easier on yourself. If you’re throwing some off-speed and command both sides of the plate with the heater, it makes for a little better time out there.”

It was the second straight start for Kelly, who had a no-decision against Miami last Saturday. He’s unsure if he’ll get another start soon or will head back to the bullpen.

”I don’t look too far ahead about anything,” said Kelly, who allowed three hits and a run in 5 1-3 innings, struck out four and walked two. ”I go out there and when they tell me to pitch, I pitch. That’s what’s good about being versatile, and I’m just still happy to be here.”

Edward Mujica pitched the ninth for his 26th save in 27 opportunities.

Thursday’s 3-0 loss snapped a five-game winning streak for the Cardinals.

An added bonus was a seventh inning pinch-hit triple by Rob Johnson, whose contract was purchased Tuesday from Triple-A Memphis. Johnson then scored on Matt Carpenter’s go-ahead double.

”We needed it,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said of Johnson’s clutch hit. ”It’s a feel-good for a guy who’s been doing a lot of things right for us in our system. In a situation, he helped us produce and we wound up getting a run out of it.”

St. Louis jumped on Cubs starter Carlos Villanueva (2-5) for two runs in the top of the first inning. Carpenter singled and scored on Beltran’s triple, followed by Allen Craig’s RBI single.

The Cubs cut St. Louis’ lead to 2-1 in the third. Luis Valbuena walked, went to second when Starlin Castro was hit by a pitch, Anthony Rizzo hit into a fielder’s choice that pushed Valbuena to third and then Alfonso Soriano’s single scored Valbuena.

After Carpenter’s double scored Johnson in the seventh to make it 3-1, Castro closed the score to 3-2 with a leadoff homer in the eighth – but the Cubs would get no closer, stranding seven runners in the game.

Even with Villanueva’s shaky first inning, Cubs manager Dale Sveum still liked what he saw from his starter.

”Six innings, 90 pitches, obviously settled down after the first inning,” Sveum said. ”Everything got much sharper and he did a great job.”

The Cubs are 12-8 in their last 20 games, and are 3-5 against St. Louis this season. They faced the best team in baseball for the second straight week. Last weekend, they took two of three from Pittsburgh, which had the best record in the majors at the time.

— Associated Press —

St. Joseph jumps on Chillicothe early and coasts to 14-0 win

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs won their second consecutive game against Chillicothe Thursday night with a 14-0 victory against the Mudcats inside Phil Welch Stadium.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team improves to 22-15 and 18-15 in the MINK League.

The Mustangs put the game away early as they scored seven runs in the first inning.  All the runs were unearned because of two Mudcat errors, but St. Joe sent 11 men to the plate and had seven hits in the opening frame.

That was more than enough for Mustangs’ starter Aaron Baker.  He threw six scoreless innings and allowed only three hits.  Baker threw only 56 pitches in six innings and imporves to 6-1 with a 1.02 ERA this season.

Shane O’Connell led St. Joseph’s 15-hit attack as he finished 3-for-5 with three RBI and two runs scored.

Brandon Huske, Griff Gordon, Joe Koeper and Jeremy Monty added two hits each, while Zac Johnson hit a two-run home run and finished with three RBI.

The Mustangs are back on the road Friday night as they play at Sedalia.  The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m. and will be broadcast on ESPN 1550 AM and here on StJosephPost.com.

Royals blow early lead and lose finale against Yankees

RoyalsDerek Jeter walked to home plate, toyed with his batting gloves, stepped into the batter’s box as fans chanted his name and legged out an infield hit.

A feeling of normalcy returned to the Yankee Stadium. The captain was back after a nine-month layoff.

But, perhaps, only for a few innings.

Jeter singled on his first pitch of the season, then felt a tight right quadriceps and was pulled for a pinch-hitter in the eighth inning of New York’s 8-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Thursday.

He scored a run and went 1 for 4 with an RBI groundout as the designated hitter in his return from a broken ankle sustained in last October’s AL championship series opener. After icing the leg, the 39-year-old was headed to a hospital for a scan.

In a season thus far memorable for sidelined stars rather than sustained success, the Yankees anxiously awaited the test results.

”It’s not frustrating, yet. We’ll see. They MRI everything around here,” Jeter said. ”I hope it’s not a big deal.”

Known for trying to ignore most injuries, Jeter vowed not to this time. Sort of.

”I can’t trick the tests,” he said, before adding: ”I always play.”

He played through September and into October last year with what was called a bone bruise. The left ankle finally gave out in the AL championship series opener against Detroit.

”I don’t think it broke because I was 38. I think it broke because I continued to play on something that maybe I shouldn’t have,” Jeter said.

The possible setback is not what the Yankees were hoping for in a season also hampered by significant injuries to first baseman Mark Teixeira, Curtis Granderson and Francisco Cervelli.

”It’s kind of what we went through this year,” manager Joe Girardi said. ”So hopefully it’s nothing, it’s just some leg tightness and he’ll be ready to go.”

Andy Pettitte (7-6) settled down after another shaky first inning to win consecutive starts for the first time since April. Lyle Overbay hit a go-ahead, two-run single in a four-run fifth against Ervin Santana (5-6) as New York overcame a 3-0 deficit and split the four-game series.

New York cut short the star shortstop’s rehabilitation assignment in the minor leagues after just four games following injuries Wednesday night to Travis Hafner and Brett Gardner, who hit for Jeter in the eighth. Jeter found out about 11 p.m. in Scranton, Pa., went back to his hotel, waited for his equipment and caught a ride to New York. He arrived about 2:30 a.m., fell asleep 90 minutes later.

And then woke up about 6:30 a.m. – only partly because of the early schedule he had been on during his rehabilitation routine.

”Couldn’t fall back asleep,” he said. ”I was nervous going into the game. It’s almost like it’s opening day for me, even though we’re in – what are we in, July now? I lost track of the months.”

Jeter batted second in his first big league game since Oct. 13. He said after the initial injury he would return by opening day, then fractured the ankle again in April during his rehab and missed the first 91 games of the season.

Jeter turned on a 95 mph fastball in the first – ”I had my mind made up yesterday that I was going to swing at the first pitch” – and sent a three-hopper up the third-base line that fell from Miguel Tejada’s throwing hand. The crowd of 40,381 screamed ”De-rek Je-ter! De-rek Je-ter!”

Jeter’s ankle got more tests when he raced to third on Robinson Cano’s single up the middle and came home without a throw on Vernon Wells’ sacrifice fly to right.

The Yankees’ all-time hits leader grounded out in the second and again in the fifth, when second baseman Johnny Giavotella made a diving stop to prevent an RBI single. That’s when the quad tightened.

Jeter hit a sharp grounder to shortstop with the infield in during the sixth. Alcides Escobar bobbled the ball as Luis Cruz scored from third, and Jeter was thrown out as he jogged up the first-base line.

”He looked the same,” Santana said. ”Very aggressive.”

Jeter had not been introduced at Yankee Stadium by Bob Sheppard’s recording in 271 days, since he sprawled onto his stomach while trying to field Jhonny Peralta’s 12th-inning grounder up the middle, immobile on the infield dirt and yelled out in pain.

”It’s awesome to have him back out there. He’s so positive,” Pettitte said. ”We need his leadership ability.”

Jeter went 1 for 9 in his tuneup at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. After initially saying Jeter could play shortstop in Friday’s series opener against Minnesota, Girardi said he likely would DH again if healthy.

”I think it’s easy to say that you would expect with his age and a double break that I think he’d lose a step or two or half a step, but I think he’s moving extremely well from what I’m told,” general manager Brian Cashman said.

Girardi’s task will be preventing Jeter from playing too much.

”I think Derek would run himself out there the next 70 games if it was up to him,” Girardi said. ”W(equals)e have to pick days off, and we have to pick DH days.”

Kansas City took a 3-0 lead in the first when Salvador Perez hit a two-run double and Lorenzo Cain had a sacrifice fly. The Royals’ only other run was unearned, set up by Pettitte’s throwing error on a second-inning bunt.

New York closed to 4-3 in the second when Austin Romine hit an RBI double and scored on Eduardo Nunez’s single. After Overbay’s two-out, go-ahead hit, Zoilo Almonte and Nunez followed with run-scoring singles for a 7-4 lead.

With Jeter in the lineup, his teammates seemed to relax.

”The fans were great, gave me a nice ovation,” Jeter said. ”It’s been a long time.”

— Associated Press —-

St. Louis gets blanked in opener at Chicago

CardsEven at his lowest point, Edwin Jackson kept believing he would somehow turn his season around.

It sure is looking like an about-face now.

Jackson earned his third straight win, combining with four relievers on a four-hitter, and Anthony Rizzo drove in all the runs to lead the Chicago Cubs to a 3-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Thursday night.

”This is probably the craziest start I’ve had in baseball,” Jackson said, referring to his season. ”It’s a game of grinding it out. As long as you believe and you have the confidence that you can come in and turn things around, it’s all that matters.

”Nobody expected me to start like I did – myself, the front office, the team, the managers. No one. But it’s a game, you have to keep grinding. You can either sink or you can swim.”

The Cubs almost went down at the end of this one.

St. Louis had the tying run at the plate in the ninth inning after Kevin Gregg dropped a throw covering first base after Rizzo made a diving stop on Allen Craig’s grounder and David Freese walked. Alfonso Soriano battled the lights and made a shoestring catch on Jon Jay’s liner to end the game.

Cardinals manager Mike Matheny was then seen arguing vehemently with plate umpire Dan Bellino and might have made contact with him in front of the first-base dugout. He also had to be restrained.

Matheny said he wasn’t sure if he made contact with Bellino or if he will be disciplined by baseball. He was actually upset at the umpire for taking off his mask after a called third strike on Matt Adams to start the inning.

”It had more to do with the umpire and how he mistreated one of our players, with Adams,” Matheny said. ”It had nothing to do with the call. It had everything to do with going too far.”

Either way, the Cubs escaped with the win. Gregg got his 16th save in 18 chances, and St. Louis’ five-game winning streak ended.

Jackson (6-10) struck out five without a walk in seven innings. Starlin Castro added three singles and scored two runs for the Cubs, who won for the fifth time in six games.

The Cardinals lost Matt Holliday to tightness in his right hamstring when he ran out a grounder in the fourth inning.

Rizzo delivered an RBI double in the first inning after Castro singled with one out and made it 3-0 in the third off Jake Westbrook (5-4), poking a two-run single to left past a drawn-in infield.

That was enough for Jackson, who didn’t give up either a run or a walk for the first time this season. He also matched his longest outing of the year and improved to 5-2 in his last seven starts after opening 1-8.

”Hopefully, this is (a sign of) things to come in the second half,” Rizzo said.

The Cubs made some crisp plays behind Jackson, including Brian Bogusevic’s leaping catch against the center-field wall to rob Adams of an extra-base hit leading off the seventh.

The Cardinals had runners on first and second in the eighth after Blake Parker gave up a leadoff single to Jay and walked pinch-hitter Daniel Descalso with one out. James Russell then retired Matt Carpenter on a liner to center, and Pedro Strop threw a wild pitch to put runners on second and third before Carlos Beltran struck out swinging to end the threat.

Westbrook went seven innings, allowing three runs and seven hits. But it was a tough night for the NL Central leaders, particularly with Holliday leaving the game.

He came up clutching his hamstring halfway to first base on a grounder to short in the fourth. He walked off gingerly after being tended to by a trainer and didn’t go out to left field in the bottom half.

”I think I’ll have a better feel for what it looks like (Friday),” Holliday said. ”And hopefully, it will be day to day and I’ll be able to use the (All-Star) break, and it will be all right.”

— Associated Press —-

Mustangs snap two-game skid with win at Chillicothe

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs snapped their two-game losing streak Wednesday night with a 7-6 victory at Chillicothe.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team got out to a quick start as they scored two runs in the first inning on RBI singles by Griff Gordon and Zac Johnson.

The Mustangs added three more runs in the second inning as Brandon Huske hit a two-run triple and scored on a balk.

Chillicothe scored one run in the third inning and three in the fourth to pull within one, but St. Joe answered with two in the sixth inning to extend their lead as Gordon and Joe Koeper had one RBI each.

The Mudcats made things interesting against Jarrod Miller in the ninth inning as they scored two runs to make it 7-6 and they had the bases loaded with no outs.  Miller then struck out the next two batters and got a ground out to end the game for his first save of the season.

Jerad Hawkins earned the win as he went seven innings and allowed four runs on 10 hits.  He struck out two and walked one.

Gordon led the Mustangs’ nine-hit attack as he went 3-for-5 with two RBI and Johnson finished 2-for-4.

St. Joseph returns home Thursday as they host Chillicothe inside Phil Welch Stadium.  The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m. and will be broadcast on 680 KFEQ and here on StJosephPost.com.

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