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

Lynn ties NL lead with 10th win as St. Louis defeats Cubs

CardsLance Lynn earned his 10th victory to tie for the NL lead, Matt Holliday homered and drove in two runs, and the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Chicago Cubs 6-1 on Thursday night.

Yadier Molina batted cleanup for the first time this season and walked twice with a double, raising his NL-leading average to .366. Allen Craig, the regular cleanup man, made his first pinch-hit appearance of the season and had a two-run double off Hector Rondon during a four-run sixth.

The Cardinals took three of four from the Cubs and lead the majors with a 47-26 record heading into a weekend interleague series against the Texas Rangers, the team they beat in the 2011 World Series.

Welington Castillo homered leading off the third for the Cubs, who left the bases loaded in the fifth when slumping Starlin Castro fouled out. They’re 20-18 against NL teams outside their division, but just 9-24 against the Central.

Lynn (10-1) allowed a run on three hits in six innings with six strikeouts and has reached double digits in wins before the All-Star break both of his years in the rotation, going 11-4 last year and making the All-Star team. He joined teammate Adam Wainwright and Washington’s Jordan Zimmermann for the league lead.

Lynn retired the side in order four times and is 5-1 against the Cubs, the lone loss coming last month at Wrigley Field. He’s won nine in a row at Busch Stadium.

Molina was 8 for 13 in the series with a homer and is 11 for 21 overall this season against Chicago with a homer and five RBIs.

Castro was 0 for 4 with two strikeouts and is in an 11-for-85 slump that has dropped his average to .232.

Castillo’s second homer of the season and first since April 8 briefly tied it at 1 after David Freese’s run-scoring groundout off Scott Feldman (6-6) had given the Cardinals the lead. Matt Carpenter scored from second on Holliday’s infield hit, a bouncer between third and short that Castro got his glove on but could not contain.

Feldman retired one of the four hitters he faced in the sixth, the lone out coming on center fielder Ryan Sweeney’s leaping catch at the wall to rob Matt Adams of a homer two at-bats after Holliday hit his 11th also to straightaway center.

The Cardinals won consecutive games for the first time since June 6-7 after alternating wins and losses for nine games.

— Associated Press —

Western men to play in inaugural Sanford Pentagon Basketball Showcase

riggertMissouriWesternFour NCAA Division II men’s basketball teams will visit the Pentagon by Sanford Health in November as part of the inaugural Sanford Pentagon Basketball Showcase, Sanford officials announced today.

Augustana College, Northern State University, the University of Central Missouri and Missouri Western State University will compete in a four-game showcase on Nov. 9 and 10. Augustana and NSU will each play UCM and MWSU on alternating days (exact match-ups are to be determined).  Start times for the games, which will be played on the Pentagon’s Heritage Court, are 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. on Nov. 9 and 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. on Nov. 10.

The Sanford Pentagon Basketball Showcase begins a day after the University of Wisconsin’s regular-season contest against St. John’s University (NY) at the Pentagon.

Augustana and NSU are both members of the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference, while UCM and MWSU compete in the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association.

“Basketball enthusiasts in this region should be excited for November at the Pentagon,” said Eric Larsen, general manager of the Sanford Sports Complex. “These four Division II games fill out an incredibly competitive and entertaining stretch of basketball at our new facility, and fans will have the chance to see familiar teams and some visiting Sioux Falls for the first time.”

Augustana, which finished the 2012-13 season 22-9, and UCM, a 22-8 team last season, both qualified for the NCAA tournament last year. NSU compiled a 20-11 mark, and MWSU was 10-17.

The Pentagon is scheduled to open in September and will hold a series of grand opening events throughout October and November for the Sioux Falls community. The facility is part of the Sanford Sports Complex located along Westport Avenue between Benson Road and West 54th Street in Sioux Falls.  The 162-acre complex is the home of the Sanford Fieldhouse and nine Junior Football fields. The Sioux Falls Ice Sports Association has announced plans to construct the Scheels IcePlex, and the Sioux Falls Tennis Association is also working to build a venue on site.

About the Pentagon by Sanford Health
The cornerstone of the Sanford Sports Complex in Sioux Falls, SD, is the Pentagon by Sanford Health, a 160,000-square-foot, five-sided facility featuring nine basketball courts, including the 1950s/1960s-inspired Heritage Court. The venue combines state-of-the-art amenities—including high-definition video boards and executive suites—with period-specific finishes that are a nod to the nostalgic days of basketball.

The 3,200-seat Pentagon is home to Sanford POWER Basketball Academy, Sanford POWER Volleyball Academy, the NBA D-League’s Sioux Falls Skyforce, the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference Women’s and Men’s Basketball tournaments and the South Dakota High School Basketball Hall of Fame. For more information, visit sanfordpentagon.com

— Press Release —

St. Joseph crushes the Kansas City Monarchs, 16-2

riggertMustangsAfter a two-day layoff the St. Joseph Mustangs returned to Phil Welch Stadium Wednesday night and crushed the Kansas City Monarchs, 16-2, in a non-league game.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team improve to 10-8 this season and they remain 7-8 in MINK League play.

The Mustangs fell behind 1-0 in the first inning, but then scored 16 unanswered runs.

St. Joseph used an eight run third inning to take the lead and they added three more runs in the fifth and five in the sixth inning.

Zac Johnson hit a two-run home run and finished with three hits.  He drove in three runs and stole home in the third inning.

Kris Koerper added a three-run home run in the game as all nine positions players for the Mustangs had at least one hit.

Jonathan McCann picked up his first win of the season as he went six innings and allowed one run on six hits.

St. Joe is back at Phil Welch Stadium Thursday night as they host Rossville in another non-league game at 7:00 PM.  The game will air live on 680 KFEQ and here on stjosephpost.com.

Royals lose series finale at Cleveland

RoyalsEvery fifth day, Indians manager Terry Francona knows he’ll get innings, maximum effort and nothing but smiles from his No. 1 starter.

And he usually gets something more important from Justin Masterson – a win.

”There’s an expectation,” Francona said. ”He’s earned that.”

Masterson managed to hang around for 6 1-3 innings and win for the sixth time at home, leading Cleveland to a 6-3 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday night.

Masterson (9-5) sidestepped trouble in the first few innings without giving up any runs and improved to 6-1 with a 2.29 ERA in nine starts at Progressive Field. The affable right-hander struck out eight while allowing two runs and nine hits.

Only Detroit’s Max Scherzer has more wins in the AL than Masterson, who has been one of the few constants on a streaky Indians squad.

”On the day he pitches, we feel pretty good,” said Francona, who managed Masterson in Boston. ”He’s earned that, for us to feel that way. His consistency with his stuff this year has been tremendous and we always know about his willingness to compete. It’s fun to watch.

”I’ve got to try not to get caught up in how fond I am of him when he’s pitching because when he comes off I’m always smiling at him. It’s hard not to.”

Michael Brantley hit a pair of solo homers and drove in three runs for the up-and-down Indians, who moved within 3 1/2 games of first-place Detroit in the AL Central. Mike Aviles drove in two runs and Michael Bourn scored twice for Cleveland, which has won six of eight after dropping eight in a row.

Unable to get a hit for four innings off Luis Mendoza (2-4), Brantley homered in the fifth and the Indians added three runs in the sixth. Brantley connected again in the eighth.

The Royals won the series opener, but dropped the final two and made some critical mistakes that cost them.

”We feel we gave one away last night,” Kansas City manager Ned Yost said. ”Tonight was a different story. They just beat us.”

Masterson, as close to an ace as the Indians have in their rotation, is 5-0 in his last six starts at home and has won nine of his past 13 decisions in Cleveland.

”It’s nice,” he said. ”It’s probably because I get to hang out with my wife and daughter before the game. It just seems to work out. I don’t know what the science is behind it. My bad games have all come on the road.”

It wasn’t a certainty he would survive the first few innings as the Royals put two runners on in the first and second but failed to score. Kansas City stranded eight runners in the first five innings and Masterson got a big defensive play by first baseman Mark Reynolds to get out of a pickle in the fourth.

Masterson was lifted in the seventh, and although he was far from dominant, Indians fans gave him a warm ovation as he headed to the dugout.

”Masterson is our ace, no question about it,” Brantley said. ”When our ace throws, we’ve got to win those games. He threw great tonight and kept us in the ballgame and that’s all you can ask.”

The Indians, who have struggled to score lately, didn’t get their first hit off Mendoza until the fifth and then chased the right-hander during their three-run sixth.

With two on and none out, Aviles hit a ball to deep left that probably should have been caught by Alex Gordon, but the two-time Gold Glove winner dropped it, allowing Drew Stubbs to score and tie it at 2.

”It’s a ball that needs to be caught, especially in that situation,” Gordon said. ”It was towards the wall but it was off my glove and I should have caught it. No question. It would have been a big out and could have changed the inning around.”

Jason Kipnis followed with a well-timed bunt single to load the bases and Mendoza threw four straight balls to Carlos Santana, forcing in Bourn with the go-ahead run.

Tim Collins then came in and allowed Brantley’s sacrifice fly that made it 4-2, but after giving up a single, he kept the Royals within two by striking out pinch hitter Ryan Raburn and getting Lonnie Chisenhall on a groundout.

However, the Indians tacked on an insurance run in the seventh when Bourn doubled, stole third and scored on Aviles’ fly ball to right.

Cleveland also got solid relief work from Bryan Shaw, who pitched 1 2-3 scoreless innings.

Mendoza, who had just one win in his previous six starts, coasted through the first four innings, allowing only a two-out walk in the first. He was handling the Indians with ease and appeared in complete control.

The right-hander didn’t make a mistake until Brantley turned on his fastball leading off the fifth, lining a shot into the right-field seats to trim Kansas City’s lead to 2-1.

”The first five innings were about as good as you can get,” Yost said. ”He just kind of fell apart in the sixth after Stubbs got the hit.”

— Associated Press —

Westbrook helps Cards beat Cubs in return from DL

CardsCardinals catcher Yadier Molina leads the National League in batting and has put himself in the early discussion for MVP honors, at least in the eyes of St. Louis right-hander Jake Westbrook.

Molina hit his fifth home run and Westbrook pitched seven innings of two-hit ball in the St. Louis Cardinals’ 4-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs on Wednesday night. Molina said the blast was somewhat of a surprise to him.

”Sometimes you get lucky,” he said. ”That was lucky.”

Westbrook (3-2) worked around trouble almost the entire night in his second start since coming off the disabled list with a sore elbow. He gave up no earned runs, striking out two and walking three.

Edward Mujica pitched a perfect ninth inning for his 21st save in 21 attempts.

Westbrook said if he voted for MVP, his battery mate would get the nod.

”With the way he’s been hitting, but more importantly the way he’s handled us as a staff and the way we’ve been pitching,” Westbrook said. ”He, in my mind, is the reason for that.”

Molina is hitting .365 and is pulling away from the field. Colorado’s Troy Tulowitzki, who is on the disabled list, is second at .347. Molina is just outside of the top 10 in RBIs (41). He’s also guides a Cardinals pitching staff that has the major leagues’ second-best ERA (3.28).

Edwin Jackson (3-9) was pulled after he hit Jon Jay following Molina’s blast to left field. He pitched 5 1-3 innings, allowing four earned runs on six hits. He struck out one and walked two.

He was going for his third consecutive victory and was pleased with his performance. He wasn’t even unhappy with the ball that Molina homered on.

”I thought it was a pretty good pitch, but either he was looking for it or he guessed right or it was right in his zone,” Jackson said. ”Either way, he hit it for a home run. But I threw my pitch with conviction and it was the pitch I wanted to throw. Sometimes it happens in a game.”

Allen Craig reached in the fifth after second baseman’s Darwin Barney’s throw on the back end of a double-play attempt went to the Cardinals dugout. Molina drove a 1-2 pitch just over the outfield wall to improve to 9 for 15 with three homers against Jackson.

Jay went to third on a hit-and-run with Daniel Descalso singling to right and scored on a hit from Pete Kozma to give St. Louis a 4-1 lead.

Westbrook retired the Cubs in order in the first and seventh innings, allowing at least one runner to reach in the five innings between. He faced the minimum in three of those five innings. Two runners were erased on inning-ending double plays and Luis Valbuena was caught stealing on a pitch out for the first out of the third.

”He was good,” Molina said of Westbrook. ”That sinker was moving a lot.”

Westbrook lasted just five innings in his return Friday at Miami. He gave up five runs (three earned) on eight hits in a loss.

”I felt good,” Westbrook said. ”I was throwing a really good sinker, tonight. I was locating it a lot better than the last start.”

Anthony Rizzo opened the second with a single and went to third when second baseman Matt Carpenter’s throw to start a potential double play sailed over the Kozma’s head and into leftfield. Rizzo tagged up on a sacrifice fly from Barney and scored after knocking the ball out of Molina’s glove.

Carpenter singled to start the first and scored on Craig’s hit to center.

— Associated Press —

Royals blow two-run eighth inning lead and lose to Cleveland

RoyalsOnce Vinnie Pestano stopped at third base, he had plenty of company.

Standing within a few feet were two Royals baserunners, two umpires, a Kansas City coach and several teammates screaming at him.

He had no idea being a temporary closer would be this difficult.

Pestano wiggled out of a jam in the ninth inning when Kansas City’s David Lough ran past his third-base coach and failed to score the tying run, giving the Indians a 4-3 win over the Royals on Tuesday night.

”I had every intention of going out there and making it a 1-2-3 inning,” Pestano said. ”But it didn’t happen that way. But at the end of the day no runs were scored and we got the ‘W.”’

Barely.

Michael Brantley’s sacrifice fly capped Cleveland’s three-run eighth inning and the Indians held on through a wild ninth to stun the Royals.

Held to one run and three hits over seven innings by Ervin Santana, the Indians finally strung something together in the eighth off Kelvin Herrera (3-5) and Tim Collins. Michael Bourn and Jason Kipnis delivered RBI hits before Brantley drove in Mike Aviles with the go-ahead run.

Cody Allen (2-0), whose throwing error in the eighth helped the Royals take a 3-1 lead, got the win. Pestano, who is filling as Cleveland’s closer while Chris Perez is on the disabled list, gave up three singles and a walk in the ninth but held on for his second save.

”Never a doubt,” he joked.

The Royals lost for just the third time in 14 games and missed a chance to move over .500 for the first time since May 18.

They probably should have tied it in the ninth when Alcides Escobar singled to right with one out and runners at first and second. But Lough ran past third-base coach Eddie Rodriguez’s stop sign, and got caught in a rundown between home and third.

Lough got back to the bag safely, but Mike Moustakas was also there and was tagged out. It appeared Lough would have scored easily as right fielder Drew Stubbs’ throw was off target.

”I take full responsibility,” said Lough, who is from nearby Akron and had several family members and friend at the game. ”It’s 100 percent my fault.”

Lough nearly made another mistake as he briefly took his hand off the bag and almost got doubled off by Pestano, who got involved in the rundown and tagged Moustakas out. Pestano said the Indians don’t necessarily work on situations where two runners are on the same base.

”Luckily, I had about seven guys shouting at me about what to do so I just chose the thing that I heard twice,” he said with a laugh.

What was he hearing?

”Run it back, run it back,”’ he said. ”’Don’t throw it, don’t throw it. Tag him, tag him, it’s his base.’ I had to process a lot of information.”

Indians manager Terry Francona said he has one basis rule in those situations.

”Tag everybody in sight,” he said. ”Umpire, everybody and hope somebody gets off the bag. It’s confusing. That’s why you tag everybody. They (umpires) can figure it out.”

Pestano settled down after the crazy play and got Eric Hosmer on a groundout with the bases loaded as the Indians got their 10th come-from-behind win.

The Indians did next to nothing against Santana, but they pounced on Kansas City’s bullpen in the eighth.

Ryan Raburn drew a leadoff walk from Herrera, moved up on a groundout and scored when Bourn slapped a single inside the left-field line.

Aviles followed with a single and Kipnis, who stranded seven runners in a 2-1 loss on Monday night, delivered an RBI double off Collins to tie it. The Royals walked Carlos Santana intentionally to load the bases and Brantley hit a fly ball to right, easily scoring Aviles.

Before the comeback, the Indians were in danger of falling another game behind Kansas City in the AL Central.

”I won’t say we needed it, but we wanted it,” Bourn said. ”They took second place over us yesterday and we came back today. Not only that, we want to win those close games like that. Those close games matter.”

Santana deserved a better outcome. The right-hander made it look easy against an Indians lineup that was in a deep offensive funk.

Santana, who pitched the only no-hitter in Progressive Field history in 2011 for the Angels, didn’t allow a runner to reach second base until the sixth and had Cleveland’s hitters guessing most of the night.

”He was spectacular,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.

Ubaldo Jimenez’s wildness helped the Royals take a 2-0 lead in the third without benefit of a hit.

He walked No. 9 hitter Escobar and Alex Gordon to start the inning and then uncorked a wild pitch, advancing the runners to second and third. Hosmer followed with an RBI groundout, and with Salvador Perez batting, Jimenez bounced another pitch in the dirt that got away from Santana, scoring Gordon.

The Indians came in leading the AL with 38 wild pitches, 29 of them with Santana behind the plate.

Before the game, manager Terry Francona defended Santana’s ability to block pitches. On Monday night, the Royals scored the go-ahead run in the eighth on a wild pitch from Bryan Shaw that Santana let go through his legs.

Unable to get anything going for the first five innings against Santana, the Indians closed to 2-1 in the sixth on Aviles’ two-out RBI single.

But the Indians gave back an unearned run in the eighth.

Hosmer led off with a comebacker to Allen, who fielded the ball cleanly but fired it past first baseman Mark Reynolds. The ball rolled down the track along the first-base line, and Hosmer hustled into third with a headfirst dive. Perez followed with an RBI single to make it 3-1.

— Associated Press —

Missouri hires former Drake head coach Mark Phelps as men’s basketball assistant

MUMissouri Head Basketball Coach Frank Haith announced the hiring of former Drake University Head Coach Mark Phelps as an assistant coach on Tuesday. Phelps enjoyed more wins (77) than any Drake head coach in his first five seasons with the program and led the Bulldogs to a pair of postseason berths, including the team’s first postseason win since 1975.

A veteran presence on the bench and on the recruiting trail, Phelps has 17 seasons of experience as both a head coach and assistant coach at the NCAA Division I level and three of his final four recruiting classes at Drake ranked either No. 1 or No. 2 in the Missouri Valley Conference by various national recruiting services.

Phelps, 47, began coaching at the Division I level in 1996 at N.C. State and has been a part of 12 postseason tournament appearances in his career, including five consecutive NCAA Tournament selections with the Wolfpack before becoming the Associate Head Coach under Sendek at Arizona State in 2006.

“We are all so excited to welcome Mark into our basketball family,” Head Coach Frank Haith said. “I’ve known Mark for a number of years and have always admired his approach to the game of basketball. He is tireless with his preparation and gets the most out of his players because he is there putting in the work with them. When we had this opening become available Mark was my first call and it speaks well of Mizzou that we were able to recruit him away from some other great programs.”

As mentioned, Phelps won more games in his first five seasons than any coach in Drake history. Owning just one NCAA Tournament appearance since 1971 and two postseason bids of any kind since 1981, Phelps helped the Bulldogs advance to the CollegeInsider.com (CIT) twice in his five years (2009 and 2012), including a win over North Dakota in the opening round in 2012. Drake (18-16 overall, 9-9 MVC in 2012) finished third in the final Missouri Valley Conference standings that season and two of his players, Rayvonte Rice and Ben Simons, earned Second Team All-Missouri Valley Conference honors.

“I’m extremely honored to have the opportunity to join Coach Haith’s staff here at Missouri and I want to thank Coach Haith, Mike Alden and the administration for giving me this opportunity to continue my coaching career as a Tiger,” Phelps said. ”It goes without saying, but I have a great deal of respect for Coach Haith and how he runs his program. He has distinguished himself as one of the elite coaches throughout his climb in our profession. We saw the fantastic job he did at Miami when we were at N.C. State and he has brought that same winning pedigree here to Mizzou.”

Phelps spent two years as the Associate Head Coach at Arizona State following his 10 seasons at N.C. State, and the Sun Devils saw remarkable improvement going from 8-22 his first season to 21-13 and a postseason appearance in year two.

“Mark’s experience on the bench and recruiting ties across the country makes this a great hire for us,” Haith said. “He was a highly respected high school coach in Virginia and he has ties throughout basketball from his time in the ACC, Pac-12 and Missouri Valley, three tremendous basketball leagues, so we are excited to get him on campus, get him acclimated to Mizzou and out on the road next month.”

Prior to joining Sendek’s staff in Raleigh, N.C., Phelps was a highly successful high school coach in Virginia. He led Rock Church Academy (1990-94) in his hometown of Virginia Beach, Va., to a 104-41 record and then moved to Atlantic Shores Christian School (1994-96), leading the team to a 44-12 mark.

— MU Sports Information —

St. Louis falls 4-2 to Cubs in game two of series

CardsJeff Samardzija hopes his traditional June swoon is a thing of the past.

Samardzija picked up first career win as a starter in his most unlucky month, tossing 8 1-3 strong innings to help the Chicago Cubs to a 4-2 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Tuesday night.

Samardzija (4-7) came into the contest winless in eight June starts – he was 2-8 with a 7.14 ERA, with both victories coming in relief.

”I really want to knock this June bugaboo,” he said. ”I’ve been working really hard and I like where I am today.”

Samardzija gave up two runs on seven hits and left with a 4-1 lead. He struck out six and walked one for his first win since May 27.

Ryan Sweeney and Cody Ransom hit back-to-back homers in a four-run first as Chicago broke a five-game losing streak in St. Louis.

The Cubs started fast against Adam Wainwright (10-4) and won for the fourth time in six games.

Carlos Beltran hit his team-high 17th homer for the Cardinals, who lost for the third time in five games but still lead the majors with a 45-26 record.

Cubs manager Dale Sveum was especially impressed with his starter.

”He was as good as he’s been all year against the best offense in baseball,” he said. ”If you can do that to them, you’ve had one heck of a game.”

Said Sweeney: ”Watching from center field, he was unbelievable.”

”He was keeping hitters off balance and still throwing 96 to 97 (mph) in the ninth inning,” he said.

Kevin Gregg picked up his 10th save in as many opportunities. He got David Freese to ground into a strange game-ending double play. Pinch-runner Shane Robinson was called out for interference while trying to break up the play at second.

Robinson was ruled to have gone out of the way to hinder the relay throw from shortstop Starlin Castro.

St. Louis manager Mike Matheny agreed with the call by umpire crew chief Fieldin Culbreth.

”He got it right,” Matheny said. ”It’s just frustrating to see the game end like that.”

The Cardinals cut the lead to 4-2 on an RBI single by Yadier Molina with one out in the ninth. Matt Holliday and Allen Craig singled with one out to chase Samardzija.

Gregg, after giving up the hit to Molina, induced Freese to hit a hot shot right at second baseman Darwin Barney, who started the double play.

Freese hit into three double plays and also struck out.

The Cubs’ first-inning runs all came after two outs. Nate Schierholtz and Alfonso Soriano hit consecutive singles before Sweeney unloaded with his second homer of the season to make it 3-0. Ransom followed with his eighth homer.

”We just got on them early,” Sweeney said. ”Thankful enough that we did. If you don’t get to a guy like that, he’ll bear down and then you can’t score any runs.”

The Cubs tied a season high with four runs in the first – they also did it in the first inning of a 10-7 loss to San Francisco on April 14.

Wainwright, who was trying to become the majors’ first 11-game winner, gave up back-to-back homers for the third time in his career. He allowed four earned runs on seven hits over seven innings.

Wainwright had won his previous five starts, but has not beaten the Cubs since Sept. 24, 2010. He had given up a total of four first-inning runs over his first 14 starts this season.

”It was unforgivable,” Wainwright said. ”I put my team in a really tough spot.”

Samardzija never let a runner past second base in the first five innings and was helped out by three double plays.

”What else can you ask for?” Samardzija said. ”Great defense. And the icing on the cake were those four runs in the first.”

Beltran homered off the right-field foul pole with two outs in the sixth. Molina went 3 for 3 and leads the NL with a .367 average.

— Associated Press —

Three Wildcats earn All-Midwest Region honors

riggertKStateKansas State’s Ross Kivett, Austin Fisher and Jared King were each named to the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA) All-Midwest Region team, while Kivett earned second team All-America honors from the organization Tuesday.

Kivett and Fisher were first team all-region honorees, while King was named to the second team. The three accolades were the most by K-State from the ABCA in a single year, while Kivett picked up the first All-America designation from the organization since Nick Martini in 2010.

The 2013 Big 12 Player of the Year, Kivett earned his third All-America honor this season, the most by a Wildcat since A.J. Morris garnered six in 2009. The second baseman finished his junior campaign with a .360 batting average, 15 doubles, four triples, three home runs and 39 RBI. He played in every game during K-State’s historic season and finished in the top 10 of four offensive categories in single-season school history.

Fisher burst onto the scene as a sophomore by hitting a team-leading .361 with 20 doubles, three triples, two home runs and 38 RBI in 60 games. The Lenexa, Kan., product tied for fourth in K-State history in doubles, while he held the sixth-longest hitting streak in school history at 18 games. An All-Big 12 First Team selection, Fisher finished in the top 10 of the Big 12 in eight offensive categories and was a semifinalist for the Gregg Olsen Breakout Player of the Year Award and on the watch list for the Brooks Wallace Award as the nation’s top shortstop.

King completed his junior year hitting .335 with 16 doubles, two triples, seven home runs and a team-high 53 RBI. An All-Big 12 First Team honoree, King finished the 2013 season in the top 10 of the Big 12 in 10 offensive categories, including a second-place ranking in RBI, and sits in the top 10 in three K-State career categories.

Kansas State finished the historic 2013 season with a 45-19 mark to set the school record for wins, while the Wildcats won their first conference championship in 80 years by compiling a 16-8 record in Big 12 play. For the first time in program history, Kansas State was selected to host a NCAA Regional and went 3-0 to register its first ever trip to a Super Regional.

— KSU Sports Information —

Chiefs announce 2013 Training Camp schedule at MWSU

riggertChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Monday dates for 2013 Chiefs Training Camp presented by Mosaic Life Care at Missouri Western State University in St. Joseph, Mo. All times and dates are subject to change.

Training camp will officially kick off on Friday, July 26 with a 3:30 p.m. practice and conclude with the club’s final practice on Aug. 14 at 8:15 a.m. Beginning July 26, all practices will be open to the public. Practices conducted indoors due to inclement weather at Missouri Western will not be open to the public. Groups of players will sign autographs following each practice session.

Unless otherwise noted, all outdoor training camp practices will be free of charge. Missouri Western will charge a $5 parking fee per vehicle per day.

Camp Kickoff on Friday, July 26 will feature a full-team autograph session following the 3:30 p.m. practice. Missouri Western will charge a $5 admission fee with no charge for children ages three and under for the first practice of camp.

The Chiefs “American Family” Fun Day will be held on Saturday, Aug. 3. Admission is free of charge and the entire team will sign autographs following practice.

Head Coach Andy Reid will be available to the media every other day beginning on July 26. On days Coach Reid is not available, the offensive, defensive and special teams coordinators will alternate appearances. Players will be made available after every practice. Walkthrough practices are closed to the public and media.

To apply for camp credentials, please email Cydney Ricker at [email protected] with your name and affiliation. Requests will be evaluated and granted on a case-by-case basis by the Chiefs Communications Staff. You must report to 220 Blum Union to pick up your credential prior to going out to practice or attending availability.

Dates   Times

Monday, July 22   Report Day (Rookies & QBs)
Tuesday, July 23   Practice – 8:45 a.m. (Coach Reid/Players Available)
Wednesday, July 24   Practice – 8:45 a.m. – (Players Only)
Thursday, July 25   Report Day – Media Access at Scanlon Hall TBA
Friday, July 26   Practice – 3:30 p.m. (Coach Reid Available) – $5 Admission Fee
Saturday, July 27   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Pederson Available)
Sunday, July 28   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Reid Available)
Monday, July 29   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Sutton & Toub Available)
Tuesday, July 30   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Reid Available)
Wednesday, July 31   No Practice
Thursday, Aug. 1   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Reid Available)
Friday, Aug. 2   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Pederson Available)
Saturday, Aug. 3   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Reid Available)
– American Family Fun Day – Entire Team Autograph Session
Sunday, Aug. 4   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Sutton & Toub Available)
Monday, Aug. 5   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Reid Available)
Tuesday, Aug. 6   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Pederson Available)
Wednesday, Aug. 7   No Practice
Thursday, Aug. 8   Team Travel Day – No Practice
Friday, Aug. 9   Preseason Game No. 1 – Chiefs at Saints – 7 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 10   No Practice
Sunday, Aug. 11   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Reid Available)
Monday, Aug. 12   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Sutton & Toub Available)
Tuesday, Aug. 13   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Pederson Available)
Wednesday, Aug. 14   Practice – 8:15 a.m. (Coach Reid Available)
Thursday, Aug. 15   Team Travel Day – No Practice – Camp in St. Joseph Breaks
Friday, Aug. 16   Preseason Game No. 2 – Chiefs vs. 49ers – 7 p.m.

*Practices July 23-24 are closed to the general public.

* Weather and field conditions are evaluated daily. All dates and times provided are subject to change.

For more information about training camp, please visit the Chiefs website at http://www.kcchiefs.com.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File