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Lough’s big day helps Kansas City split series at Minnesota

RoyalsLast in the American League in home runs, the Kansas City Royals connected twice Sunday at the most opportune times.

David Lough hit three doubles, then launched a tiebreaking homer in the eighth inning that led the Royals over the Minnesota Twins 9-8.

Lough hit his second homer of the season, sending a solo drive off Jared Burton (1-5) into the right-field seats for an 8-7 lead.

Eric Hosmer added a solo homer in the ninth for the Royals. Johnny Giavotella had three hits.

”We’re just trying to find ways to score runs, and if that comes from the home run or through small ball, we honestly don’t care,” Hosmer said.

The Royals have just 49 homers this year, 24 fewer than the next-closest team in the league: Minnesota.

Hosmer and Alex Gordon have seven home runs, Billy Butler has six and Mike Moustakas five. The quartet combined for 77 last season.

”They’ve got some hitters over there. Those guys can swing the bats. I know they haven’t been consistent doing it, but they’ve got some good young hitters who can pop a baseball,” Minnesota manager Ron Gardenhire said.

Aaron Crow (5-3) pitched 1 2-3 scoreless innings for the Royals. Greg Holland got his 17th save in 19 chances despite giving up a home run to Trevor Plouffe in the ninth.

Minnesota, which trailed 5-1 after four innings, got a two-run homer from Justin Morneau and an RBI double by pinch-hitter Josh Willingham to tie it at 7 in the seventh.

Ervin Santana allowed three earned runs and five hits in six innings for Kansas City. He has gone at least six innings in each of his 16 starts this season, the longest active streak in majors.

It was been a strong June for the right-hander. In six starts, he has a 1.99 ERA, limiting opponents to 27 hits and two home runs in 40 2-3 innings. He struck out four, but also had a season-high four walks.

The Royals led 5-4 when Lough, the Royals’ eighth-place hitter, doubled in the sixth off reliever Ryan Pressly and took third as Giavotella blooped a double to left-center between three fielders. Gordon was walked to intentionally load the bases before Alcides Escobar hit a two-run single.

”I don’t think I’ve ever had a day like this, not even in the minor leagues,” Lough said. ”It was one of those games where our offense was going to have to put together some runs.”

This was just the fourth time in 12 games that the Royals scored more than three runs.

”We’ve never lost confidence as an offense,” Hosmer said. ”We always knew we had the potential to put up days like this.”

Kevin Correia, the Twins’ most consistent starter, gave up five earned runs in five innings.

The Royals scored three times in the fourth. Lough hit an RBI double off the right-field wall and Giavotella had an RBI single for a 5-1 lead. Giavotella was recalled Saturday from Triple-A Omaha when the Royals designated outfielder Jeff Francoeur for assignment.

”They had a lot of hits today, between me and the bullpen, that weren’t well struck but got in spots to keep a rally going or get on base and start a rally,” Correia said. ”It’s just one of those games. We scored eight runs. That should be enough to win the game.”

Clete Thomas homered in the Minnesota fifth.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals lose series finale at Oakland

CardsJosh Donaldson is pushing for a spot on the American League All-Star team with his bat and glove.

Donaldson homered, reached base safely four times and made a pair of stellar defensive plays, including a tumbling catch while crashing over a roll of infield tarp in foul territory, to help preserve Oakland’s 7-5 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Sunday.

”If someone wants to say that I’m having an All-Star year so far, that’s fine,” said Donaldson, who also doubled. ”I’ve said it a hundred times, if I just focus on helping our team win and try to do something productive for the team, the individual stuff is going to take care of itself.”

Donaldson went into the day ranked in the top five among AL third basemen in batting average, home runs and RBIs but was fifth in the most recently released All-Star voting.

That could change the more the A’s win and the more Donaldson flashes his defensive skills.

His catch on Matt Carpenter’s foul in the fourth ended a two-on, two-out threat. Donaldson later made a diving stop on Allen Craig’s grounder to end the seventh with the tying run on second.

Oakland needed it to overcome a rocky outing by starter Tommy Milone.

Milone gave up three home runs and pitched with runners in scoring position in four of the six innings he worked, but got the win after the A’s rallied from deficits of 3-0 and 5-2.

”Probably not his best command … but he fought his way through,” Oakland manager Bob Melvin said. ”Against a team like that, to give us six innings, you wouldn’t have forcasted that after the first inning.”

Jed Lowrie also homered for the A’s, who padded their AL-best home record by taking two of three in this interleague series. Oakland has won 16 of its last 19 games at the Coliseum.

Carlos Beltran, Craig and Carpenter homered for the Cardinals.

The slugfest in the series finale was in stark contrast to the first two games when starting pitchers Bartolo Colon of the A’s and Adam Wainwright of the Cardinals put together dominant performances.

”That was kind of the game I anticipated happening but with us on the other side,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. ”We came out swinging the bats. I’ve seen them enough to know this series was going to be like. Today could have gone either way.”

Oakland had seven extra-base hits – five off St. Louis starter Jake Westbrook. Westbrook (4-3) lasted just four innings and gave up six runs and 10 hits overall.

Lowrie’s go-ahead two-run blast was the big blow, while Donaldson’s solo shot off reliever Trevor Rosenthal in the seventh capped the A’s best offensive day in two weeks.

Oakland remained a half-game behind Texas in the AL West and improved to 26-13 at home. The A’s are also 48-35, their best record after 83 games since 1992.

Milone (7-7) overcame his rocky outing to win for the first time since June 3. Oakland’s left-hander allowed seven hits over six innings with five strikeouts and two walks. The three home runs allowed by Milone also matched a season-high.

Sean Doolittle and Ryan Cook each pitched a scoreless inning of relief, and Grant Balfour worked the ninth for his 19th save.

”It makes it a lot easier when we come back and score some runs,” Milone said. ”We just kept coming back.”

St. Louis, which began the day one game behind Pittsburgh in the NL Central, took a pair of early leads but couldn’t make them hold up.

Beltran and Craig hit back-to-back home runs in the first inning to give the Cardinals a 3-0 lead. It was Beltran’s team-leading 19th homer while Craig’s blast was his third on the Cardinals current road trip.

The A’s pulled within one when Lowrie singled in Seth Smith and scored on an RBI double by Yoenis Cespedes in the bottom of the inning.

Carpenter’s solo home run in the third off Milone made it 4-2. Lowrie, Oakland’s shortstop, later let Matt Holliday’s grounder go through his legs and was slow to retrieve the ball, allowing Beltran to score from second.

Oakland scored twice in the third with the help of two errors, and then went ahead 6-5 on Lowrie’s two-run homer off Westbrook in the fourth after Chris Young’s leadoff single.

”I just didn’t have it,” Westbrook said. ”It seemed like I was fighting it all day. The ball was all over the place.”

— Associated Press —

Koerper brothers lead St. Joseph to doubleheader sweep over Ozark

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs snapped a two-game losing streak Friday night against Ozark as St. Joe’s summer college baseball swept a doubleheader against the Generals, 10-3 and 8-7.

In game one, St. Joseph jumped out to a 1-0 lead after the first inning, but they opened things up in the third with four more runs.

The Mustangs added three in the fifth inning and two runs in the sixth.

Joe and Kris Koerper each homered and drove in three runs in the game.  The first time the two brothers homered in the same game this season.

Eric Swain, Connor Foreman and Payton Scarbrough each had one RBI each, while Brandon Huske scored three runs.

St. Joe starter Aaron Baker threw a complete game to earn the win as he improves to 4-1.  Baker allowed three runs on just four hits.  He struck out three and didn’t walk a batter.

In game two, the Mustangs raced out to a 3-0 lead after the first inning, but Ozark scored seven unearned runs with four in the third inning adn three more in the fourth.

St. Joseph did battle back though and eventually won the game in dramatic fashion.

The Mustangs pulled within one run in the seventh and final inning, and Kris Koerper came through with a two-out RBI double to score Emilio Villanueva and tie the game.

Then Joe Koerper hit a sharp ground ball to second that Justin Lois couldn’t handle and Brandon Huske scored the winning run.

Kris Koerper hit another home run in the nightcap and had three RBI, while Swain had two hits and Kyle Richards hit a home run and drove in two runs.

Staten Jones struggled on the mound as he went just 3.1 innings and he allowed six runs on six hits.  Trey Gonsalez earned the win in relief as he went 1.1 innings and didn’t allowed a run.

The Mustangs are now 15-10 this season and 11-10 in the MINK League.  They’re at home again Saturday as they host the Sedalia Bombers at 7:00 p.m. and the game will be broadcast on 680 KFEQ and here on StJosephPost.com.

Royals use four HRs to back Shields, pound Minnesota

Royals Eric Hosmer hit two of Kansas City’s season-high four home runs, James Shields pitched six strong innings to win for first time in 11 starts and the Kansas City Royals beat the Minnesota Twins 9-3 on Friday night.

Billy Butler and Mike Moustakas also homered for the Royals.

Clete Thomas homered for the Twins, who got another rough start from P.J. Walters (2-4). Walters allowed six runs in three innings one start after giving up six in the first at Cleveland last Saturday.

The Royals entered the game with the fewest home runs in the majors (43) — two behind Miami — and had given Shields (3-6) some of the worst run support in the league. But the veteran right-hander had a three-run lead by the time he took the mound for the first time Friday, thanks to Butler’s three-run homer. Shields never allowed Minnesota to get close the rest of the way.

Down 4-0 in the third, Walters allowed a two-run homer to Moustakas and drew a chorus of boos from the home crowd. Anthony Swarzak took over for Walters in the fourth and gave up a solo shot to Hosmer in the fifth. Hosmer got Swarzak again in the seventh, this time with Alcides Escobar on base, for the second multihomer game of his career.

The offensive outburst was a welcome change for Shields, who had been stuck on 89 wins for his previous 10 starts despite putting up quality numbers. He entered Friday night’s game with the eighth-best ERA in the A.L. (2.92), third in innings (111) and eighth in strikeouts (99). But his run support of 3.00 per nine innings pitched was second-lowest in the league.

The Twins broke through against Shields in the fourth when Justin Morneau hit an RBI doubled. Morneau came around to score three batters later on a double by Brian Dozier. Thomas led off the fifth with a solo shot to right.

Shields worked 6 1/3 innings before being pulled for Tim Collins.

— Associated Press —

Mustangs lose big to Ozark Thursday, 15-2

riggertMustangsAfter a three-day layoff the St. Joseph Mustangs returned home to Phil Welch Stadium and suffered their worst loss of the season as they lost to Ozark, 15-2.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team falls to 13-10 this season and 9-10 in the MINK League.

The Generals scored a run in the first inning and broke the game open with four runs in each of the third and fifth innings.

Ozark pounded out 19 hits as Mustangs’ starter Jonathan McCann was knocked out of the game in the third inning.  He gave up five runs and six hits, while striking out two and walking two others.

Jared Hawkins and Patrick Brady didn’t fair much better on the mound.  Hawkins allowed six runs on five hits in 2.1 innings, while Brady went 4.0 innings and gave up four runs and eight hits.

St. Joseph scored in the fourth inning on an error by Ozark shortstop Jacob Garrison and the Mustangs added one run in the ninth inning on a solo home run by Brandon Huske.

St. Joe is back at home against Ozark Friday for a doubleheader that begins at 6:00 p.m. inside Phil Welch Stadium.  Game one will be broadcast live on ESPN 1550 AM and here on StJosephPost.com.

Kansas’ McLemore selected 7th overall by Sacramento

KUFor the second-straight season, a Kansas men’s basketball player was taken in the top-10 as NBA Commissioner David Stern announced Ben McLemore was selected seventh overall by the Sacramento Kings in the 2013 NBA Draft Thursday night at the Barclays Center.

McLemore, who was joined by head coach Bill Self in the “Green Room,” became the 29th first-round draft pick in Kansas men’s basketball history and marks the fourth-straight season a Jayhawk has been selected in the first round. The seventh overall pick marks the second-straight season that a Jayhawk has gone in the top-10 overall, both of which coming from Sacramento. The Kings selected Thomas Robinson fifth overall in the 2012 NBA Draft.

“He means a lot to me as far a maturity and helping me grow as a person on and off the court,” McLemore said to ESPN analyst Shane Battier regarding Self. “We have a good bond with each other and the staff. I enjoyed playing for Coach Self.

KU is among the top-five for producing the most NBA Draft picks in the nation with 18 drafted over the last decade. Since the inception of the Big 12 in 1996-97, KU has had 24 players drafted to the NBA, which is the most of any league member. KU has sent 28 players to the NBA during the past 20 years, passing North Carolina for third-most among all NCAA Division I schools and only trails Kentucky (31) and Duke (29). Playing for the Kings, McLemore will join Cole Aldrich as former Jayhawks on the roster.

The second guard selected in the 2013 draft class, McLemore was a Consensus All-America Second Team selection and an All-Big 12 First Team honoree. He led Kansas in scoring in 2012-13 with 15.9 points per game, good for third in the Big 12. The 6-foot-5 St. Louis, Mo., native led the Big 12 with an 87.0 free throw percentage and also ranked among the league leaders in field-goal percentage (49.5, 8th), three-point field goal percentage (42.0, 2nd), three-point field goals made (2.0, 6th) and rebounds (5.2, 20th).

Additionally, McLemore’s 15.9 points per game this season broke the KU freshman record of 14.6 ppg posted by Jayhawk legend Danny Manning in 1985. McLemore’s 589 points and his 87.0 free throw percentage also broke KU freshman marks, previously held by Manning and Greg Gurley, respectively.

McLemore had 11 games of 20 points or more in 2012-13, including three 30-point contests. His 36 points against West Virginia (3/2) broke the KU freshman single-game scoring record and his three 30-point efforts also set a KU freshman single-season mark.

During the 2012-13 season, McLemore was a three-time Big 12 Rookie of the Week and was named the league’s Player of the Week on Jan. 14. He became only the second Jayhawk in the 17-year history of the Big 12 to have earned Big 12 Player and Rookie of the Week in the same season. Mario Chalmers also accomplished the feat during the 2005-06 season.

— KU Sports Information —

Kansas City drops series opener at Minnesota

RoyalsSamuel Deduno had that ever-important command, of his fastball and his emotions.

The key to keeping calm?

”Oh, just breathe,” Deduno said with a smile after he pitched seven sharp innings to send the Minnesota Twins to a 3-1 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Thursday.

One of Justin Morneau’s two doubles drove in Minnesota’s first run in the fourth, and Deduno took over from there.

”Some guys really look like they think they’re going to hit it, and then all of a sudden it just kind of moves late on them,” said Morneau, who handled more than his share of groundouts at first base during Deduno’s outing. ”He did a really nice job tonight. That was what we needed.”

Deduno (4-2) gave up only five hits and, more importantly, one walk. He struck out three and let only eight fair balls leave the infield. Jared Burton pitched a scoreless eighth and Glen Perkins notched his 20th save in 22 tries with a scoreless ninth inning despite allowing a walk and a double.

The Twins even managed to beat Jeremy Guthrie (7-6). The right-hander topped them twice earlier this season and brought a 6-2 record over nine previous career matchups into the game. Guthrie gave up an RBI single to Oswaldo Arcia right after Morneau’s big hit, but the other run he allowed was unearned.

Salvador Perez’s soaring home run, to the second deck in left field, was the only evidence of success by the Royals against the improving Deduno, who last year couldn’t find the plate despite showing some potential with his lively right arm.

”Everything moves. Just tough,” Royals designated hitter Billy Butler said. ”He’s got a good slider. Hard curve. He’s just real efficient.”

After shining for the Dominican Republic during the World Baseball Classic in March, Deduno has finally found the control of his fastball that escaped him before. His career walks-per-nine-innings ratio was 5.2 entering this game, buoyed by the 53 he issued last season in 79 innings.

In seven starts this year since being called up from Triple-A Rochester, Deduno has completed six innings with three runs or fewer allowed four times.

”He’s got a really nice natural cutter that just bores in on our lefties,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”We just haven’t done anything against him.”

Following consecutive singles to start the seventh, Deduno had runners at the corners with one out. But he struck out David Lough, celebrating the whiff with a slight hop off the mound at the end of his follow through. Then he got Elliot Johnson to ground out.

”That was a huge sequence of pitches,” Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said, adding: ”He’s more in control on the mound. His windup, he’s not falling all over the place.”

Said Deduno: ”Tonight, everything was working.”

For a couple of below-average teams, this was a crisply played game befitting of the clear-and-dry picturesque summer evening. The fielding error by Royals third baseman Mike Moustakas in the seventh that loaded the bags prior to Pedro Florimon’s sacrifice fly, which came against reliever Will Smith, was about the only blemish.

Lough, the right fielder, did his best to keep Guthrie in it by tracking down Morneau’s two-out double in the corner and start a textbook 9-4-2 relay to keep Josh Willingham from scoring in the sixth.

Guthrie lost his third straight start, but he could hardly be faulted for this one. He retired the first nine batters he faced and allowed six hits over 6 2-3 innings while striking out four and walking two.

The Royals, who have won five of six against the Twins in Kansas City this season, fell to 14-10 in June. That was their April record, too, but that ugly 8-20 mark in May is what has kept them from seriously challenging first-place Detroit in the AL Central.

The Twins improved to 11-4 in their last 15 home games.

— Associated Press —

KU’s Withey taken by Trailblazers in Second Round of NBA Draft

KUJeff Withey became the second Jayhawk selected in the 2013 NBA Draft when the Portland Trailblazers selected the former Kansas big man with the ninth pick of the second round – 39th overall – inside the Barclays Center Thursday evening.

After former teammate Ben McLemore’s named was called as the seventh overall draftee, he and Withey became the 73rd and 74th players to be drafted in Kansas men’s basketball history. The duo marks the 23rd time – and fourth-consecutive year – that multiple Jayhawks were drafted.

“He can shoot,” head coach Bill Self said of Withey on ESPN Radio. “He can make a pick-and-pop 17-foot shot, and I wouldn’t say he has the greatest face-up game, but he can make a face-up jumper. Then he has another skillset – that regardless of who he’s guarding – he’ll be hard to score over. He’s unbelievable at creating that separation so he gets a free jump to try to block or alter a shot. He’s as I’ve ever seen at that. Those are two skills that a lot of people wish they had.”

Withey and McLemore pushed KU to 19 picks over the last decade, putting KU among the top-five schools for producing the most NBA Draft selections. Since the inception of the Big 12 in 1996-97, KU has seen 25 players drafted to the NBA, which is the most of any league member. KU has sent 29 players to the NBA during the past 20 years, which sent KU past North Carolina for third-most among all NCAA Division I schools and only trails Kentucky Duke (31) and Kentucky (30).

The National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) Co-Defensive Player of the Year, Withey broke his own Kansas and Big 12 single-season record blocked shots record with 146 blocks in 2012-13. Last season Withey blocked 140 shots to set the school and league mark. The 2012 and 2013 Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year, Withey is also the KU and Big 12 career blocked shots leader ending his career with 312 all-time blocks.

More than merely a defensive threat, Withey led Kansas in rebounding at 8.5 boards per game to complement his 13.7 scoring average. The 7-foot San Diego native was named the Most Outstanding Player of the 2013 Big 12 Championship.

A three-time Big 12 Player of the Week this season, Withey led the Big 12 with 3.95 blocked shots per game, which ranked second nationally. That mark also set the KU and conference per game average season record. Withey was named to the Consensus All-America Second Team along with McLemore.

— KU Sports Information —

Gordon’s walk-off lifts Royals past Atlanta in 10 innings

RoyalsAlex Gordon drove in David Lough in the 10th inning Wednesday night, giving the Kansas City Royals a 4-3 victory over the Atlanta Braves and a split of their two-game series.

Lough had entered the game the previous inning as a pinch hitter, but was still at-bat because Elliot Johnson was picked off first base to end the ninth. Lough singled off Braves reliever Alex Wood (0-2) to start the 10th and then reached second when Miguel Tejada laid down a perfect sacrifice bunt.

That set the stage for Gordon, who hit a solo home run earlier in the game. He dropped a base hit into shallow left field, allowing Lough to score easily as the Royals spilled from their dugout.

Aaron Crow (4-3) worked the 10th inning for the Royals, who had lost five of their last six. It was the sixth time in the last eight games that Kansas City played a one-run contest.

The Royals were actually in control through six innings.

Gordon ended a 159 at-bat homerless drought with his first-inning shot, the first leadoff homer of the season for the Royals. It was Gordon’s first home run since May 9 at Baltimore.

Billy Butler added a two-out double to right, and then the big DH chugged home when Salvador Perez got just enough of the bat on a pitch from Mike Minor to hit a single to left field.

The Royals tacked on another run in the third when Gordon singled to lead off the inning. Alcides Escobar put runners on the corners with nobody out before Eric Hosmer lined into a double play, but Butler managed to bring Gordon home with a timely single to make it 3-0.

That was all the offense until Luis Mendoza started to unravel in the seventh inning.

The Royals starter kept the Braves off balance with a mixture of fastballs and sliders, and had given up just three hits to that point. But he’d put runners on the corners with two outs when he was lifted for left-hander Bruce Chen, who promptly served up an RBI single to pinch-hitter Reed Johnson.

Chen walked Jason Heyward to load the bases and was replaced by right-hander Luke Hochevar, who gave up a tying two-run single to Justin Upton. Heyward was thrown out at third on the play to end the inning.

Minor allowed three runs on nine hits over six innings, while Mendoza gave up two runs on five hits over 6 2/3 innings. Neither of them factored into the decision.

Instead, it came down to a duel between bullpens.

Alex Avilan and Jordan Walden breezed through the Royals lineup, the only blip coming when Mike Moustakas singled off Walden with two outs in the ninth inning. Johnson came in to pinch run and strayed too far from first base, allowing Walden to pick him off and end the inning.

Hochevar wound up going 1 1/3 innings for the Royals, who brought in star closer Greg Holland to pitch the ninth inning. He struck out the side on just 11 pitches.

— Associated Press —

Four-run fourth inning dooms St. Louis in loss to Astros

CardsErik Bedard pitched six effective innings and the Houston Astros used a four-run fourth inning to beat the St. Louis Cardinals 4-3 on Wednesday night.

Bedard (3-3) allowed seven hits and walked one, but limited St. Louis to three runs. Three relievers then combined to pitch two hitless innings before Jose Veras worked the ninth for his 16th save.

Veras yielded a one-out single to Jon Jay and then walked Matt Adams, but pinch hitter Daniel Descalso struck out and Matt Carpenter flied out to end the game.

Allen Craig homered for the second straight night and Yadier Molina had a two-run shot for the Cardinals, who lost for the fourth time in five games. They dropped into a tie with surging Pittsburgh for the lead in the NL Central.

Lance Lynn (10-2) allowed five hits and four runs, walked four and struck out four over 7 2-3 innings for his first loss in four career starts in Houston.

Molina and Craig helped the Cardinals get off to a nice start. Molina followed Carpenter’s leadoff single with a drive to the Crawford Boxes in left field for his sixth homer. Craig had a leadoff drive in the fourth that bounced off the lights atop the wall in left field, extending the lead to 3-0.

But Houston responded in the bottom half. Jose Altuve and Jason Castro got it started with back-to-back singles for the Astros’ first hits of the game. Lynn then walked Chris Carter on four pitches to load the bases before sending a run home when he also walked Carlos Pena on four pitches.

Castro came home when J.D. Martinez grounded into a fielder’s choice, and Brett Wallace then hit a tying RBI single. After another fielder’s choice, Brandon Barnes singled in Wallace to give Houston the lead for good.

The Astros threatened again in the fifth, putting two runners on with two out, but Lynn retired Martinez to end the inning. That was the first of eight straight batters retired by Lynn

Josh Fields retired the first two St. Louis batters in the seventh before left-hander Wesley Wright came in and struck out Carpenter.

Jose Cisnero faced the heart of the Cardinals’ order in the eighth. He got Molina on a groundout before walking Carlos Beltran. He then struck out Craig and Matt Holliday to finish the inning.

— Associated Press —

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