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

Cain HR, Hosmer single lead Royals to comeback win over Detroit

RoyalsAfter striking out his first three times, Lorenzo Cain came through in the ninth inning for the Kansas City Royals.

Cain hit a tying, two-run homer off Jose Valverde with two outs in the ninth and Eric Hosmer had a winning RBI single in the 10th, helping the Royals rally for a 3-2 victory over the Detroit Tigers on Wednesday.

Cain struck out three times against Detroit ace Justin Verlander, who pitched seven scoreless innings.

”It was a crazy game from having the hat trick to being able to get a ball out of here was huge,” Cain said. ”I was glad I was able to get a good pitch and get it over the fence for us to tie the game up.”

Drew Smyly pitched a one-hit eighth, then allowed a leadoff single in the ninth to Hosmer and was replaced by Valverde. He retired Santiago Perez on a flyout and struck out Billy Butler as Hosmer stole second – becoming the first Kansas City runner in scoring position.

Cain fouled off three pitches, then sent an 85 mph offering over the wall in left-center. Valverde blew a save for the third time in 12 chances.

Cain was not sure it was going to clear the fence.

”I put it on the barrel, but after that it was either wind or carry,” Cain said. ”I thought it was in the gap. I was just blowing for it to go out for me and it did.”

Verlander did not allow a batter past first base, giving up three singles, striking out eight and walking two in a 117-pitch outing, his second-highest total this season.

”It was a tough outing, Verlander being Verlander as usual, dominating,” Cain said. ”I say continue to battle, got a pitch up, put a nice easy swing on it and it got over the fence.”

Verlander has a 15-2 record with a 2.56 ERA in 25 starts against the Royals.

”It hurts,” Verlander said. ”You’ve got two outs and two strikes, and when the ball leaves the yard, it’s not a good feeling. It only tied the game, so we immediately need to change our mindset to OK, let’s win it. To lose it that way, it’s a tough pill to swallow.

”Losing period stinks. When you lose one that’s so close to a win makes it that much more difficult.”

Greg Holland (2-1) pitched a perfect 10th, striking out Torii Hunter and Miguel Cabrera and retiring Prince Fielder on a lineout, and Miguel Tejada singled off Phil Coke (0-4) leading off the bottom half.

Tejada advanced to third on Alcides Escobar’s sacrifice and Alex Gordon’s groundout to first, and Hosmer singled to center.

”That was a great win,” Hosmer said. ”We’re down to our last strike with the closer on the mound. That’s just the character of this team. We’re not going to give up until the last out is made.

”Cain had a day like he did, the first couple of at-bats, strikes out. The way he comes up in the last inning with two strikes, it’s battling right there.”

Tigers manager Jim Leyland’s post-game press conference was brief, lasting 97 seconds.

”Verlander showed why he’s the horse today,” Leyland said. ”He was terrific, absolutely terrific. He stepped up today. That’s the way he’s been the seven years I’ve been here.”

But the Tigers’ bullpen remains an Achilles’ heel with a 4-12 record and eight blown saves.

”He (Valverde) got two quick outs and then he hung a splitter,” Leyland said. ”He left it out over the plate. It didn’t split and the kid hit it out. The key was the ninth inning. We got two quick outs and two strikes and the guy hit it out.”

James Shields, acquired from Tampa Bay in a December trade, allowed two runs and six hits in seven innings for the Royals. He is 0-4 in eight starts since beating the Rays on April 30 despite a 2.64 ERA in that span.

Detroit built its lead on Fielder’s RBI single in the first and consecutive doubles by Matt Tuiasosopo and Brayan Pena in the fifth. Pena, who played the four previous years with Kansas City, has three doubles, two homer and 10 RBIs in his past 16 games.

Royals right fielder David Lough robbed Cabrera of a run-producing extra-base hit in the third when he made a diving catch of his liner to the gap with Hunter on first. Lough received a standing ovation from the Kauffman Stadium crowd of 24,564, while Shields tipped his cap and waited for Lough in front of the Royals dugout to congratulate him.

”If you rate it a 15 on a 10 (scale), that’s how I would rate his catch,” Shields said. ”It’s a very crucial part of the game. That’s going to be up there for catch of the year as far as I’m concerned.”

— Associated Press —

St. Louis gets shut down by Mets, 5-1

CardsDillon Gee is grateful for the recent spate of bad weather – in more ways than one.

Gee revealed he has tendinitis in his right elbow and was able to make his start Wednesday night because two rainouts last week in Washington pushed his turn back a couple of days.

What a start it was, though.

Gee pitched effectively into the seventh inning, Lucas Duda hit one of three Mets homers and New York scored the most runs allowed by Shelby Miller in his young career for a 5-1 win over the St. Louis Cardinals.

”Luckily, the rainouts came at a great time for me personally,” Gee said.

The right-hander said he’s had tendinitis since spring training and his elbow was checked out by a doctor. Now, it’s just a matter of managing the pain.

David Wright and Marlon Byrd also connected for the Mets, who snapped a three-game skid and improved to 2-6 in June. Duda drove in two runs, including a first-inning single that scored Daniel Murphy from first base.

With prized pitching prospect Zack Wheeler nearing his promotion to the big leagues, Gee (5-6) has done everything possible to protect his spot in the rotation. He has yielded only three earned runs over 21 innings in his past three starts – all wins.

The run of poor weather – the Mets have been postponed six times this season – also might help keep Gee in the rotation for at least another start or two. More rain is forecast for Thursday.

”We’re looking right now at a possibility of going with the sixth starter for a few days,” manager Terry Collins said.

New York needs an extra starter for a makeup doubleheader Tuesday in Atlanta.

A day after being named NL captain for the Home Run Derby during All-Star week at Citi Field, Wright hit a long ball into the center-field seats just to the right of the Big Apple in the sixth.

”I simply didn’t execute,” Miller said. ”A curveball right down the middle to Duda, a fastball right down the middle to Wright. I made mistakes and they capitalized on them.”

The NL Central-leading Cardinals entered with the league’s best batting average at .277 but could get little going against Gee, who is on a three-game run that’s as good as Miller (7-4) has been all season.

Gee scattered six hits and struck out seven in 6 2-3 innings. He gave up a one-out homer in the sixth to Allen Craig – his second in two days against the Mets.

The recent success could not have come at a better time for the crafty Gee, because the Mets plan to call up Wheeler to start one game of Tuesday’s doubleheader. While Collins said everyone would get their turn through the rotation, a pitcher will likely be demoted to the bullpen after that to make room for Wheeler – and it most likely will be Gee or Jeremy Hefner.

”You’ve got to weigh a lot of things, Collins said. ”You’ve got to weigh health. You’re going to weigh who could pitch out of the bullpen, who’s got credentials out of the bullpen. It could be we can’t afford to put somebody in the bullpen, we’re going to need a starter at another time.”

Miller, on the other hand, has solidified a spot in the Cardinals’ rotation with surprising consistency for a 22-year-old. The four runs the Mets scored were the most he’s allowed in 19 big league appearances – 13 starts this season. He had allowed three runs three times this year and his ERA is 2.21, up from 1.91 going into the game.

”There are time that it’s not just selection (of pitches), but execution,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. ”Sometimes young pitchers with early success in their careers fall into this. It is a tough league, good hitters – they make adjustments. They call this a game of adjustments for a reason.”

Miller struck out 10 without a walk in six innings.

The Mets did not score against him over 5 2-3 innings on May 15 but were able to go ahead in the first when Wright lined a two-out double to right-center and scored on Murphy’s single.

Running on a pitch to Duda, Murphy, not known for his speed, scored from first when right fielder Carlos Beltran played the line drive down the first base line lackadaisically and made his throw to second base.

”What a great read. He never slowed down,” Byrd said. ”That’s what we need – aggressive.”

With one out in the fourth, Duda homered into the Cardinals’ bullpen in right-center to end a run of eight straight outs by Miller that began after Duda’s RBI single in the first.

Byrd homered off Seth Maness in the seventh.

David Freese went 0 for 4 for the Cardinals, ending his career-best hitting streak at 20 games – longest in the majors this season.

— Associated Press —

Kansas State’s Kivett earns another All-America honor

KSUKansas State second baseman Ross Kivett picked up his second All-America designation of the year as he was honored by Baseball America Wednesday.

Kivett, who was named to the third team, also obtained All-America accolades from Collegiate Baseball following the conclusion of the regular season. The 2013 Big 12 Player of the Year, Kivett is the fourth Wildcat since 2009 to earn multiple All-America honors in the last five years as he joins pitchers A.J. Morris (2009) and James Allen (2011), and outfielder Nick Martini (2010).

A product of Broadview Heights, Ohio, Kivett finished his junior campaign hitting .360 with 15 doubles, four triples, three home runs and 39 RBI. He helped lead K-State to its first conference championship in 80 years as he ranked second in the Big 12 with a .376 average against league foes. He also went 6-for-12 with two home runs and five RBI to earn MVP honors in the NCAA Manhattan Regional, leading the Wildcats to their first regional title.

Kivett’s season numbers rank highly in Kansas State history as he set the school records for games played (64), starts (64) and at-bats (261). He also placed in the top 10 in singles (second; 72), hits (third; 94) and steals (seventh; 26). A 10th-round draft pick by the Cleveland Indians, Kivett finished the season in the top-10 of nine offensive categories in the Big 12, including top marks in hits and runs scored (57), and second-place rankings in steals and total bases (126).

Kansas State finished the 2013 season at 45-19 to set the school record for wins, while they captured their first conference championship since 1933 by going 16-8 in Big 12 play. The Wildcats were selected to host their first-ever NCAA Regional and defeated Wichita State, No. 30 Bryant and No. 12 Arkansas to registered their first Super Regional appearance.

Led by Kivett, Kansas State placed seven players on the All-Big 12 First Team, including Big 12 Freshman of the Year Jake Matthys and Co-Scholar Athlete of the Year Jared King. Additionally, head coach Brad Hill earned his second Big 12 Coach of the Year designation as Kansas State became the first school in conference history to have its football, men’s basketball and baseball coaches pick up coach-of-the-year honors in the same academic year.

— KSU Sports Information —

Mustangs rally past Joplin to win series finale

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs wrapped up their three-game series at Joplin Tuesday night with an 8-5 victory over the Outlaws.

It’s the second straight win for St. Joe’s summer college baseball team as they took two-of-three from Joplin and are 4-2 against the Outlaws this season.

The Mustangs jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first inning and led 4-1 after two, but Joplin tied the game with three runs in the third inning and they took the lead 5-4 after five.

St. Joseph regained the lead for good in the seventh inning as Kris Koerper had an RBI single and Kyle Simpson drove in a run with a ground out.

The Mustangs added two insurance runs in the eighth inning as Emilio Villanueva and Connor Foreman drove in one run each.

Foreman finished 3-for-5 with two RBI and two runs scored, while Simpson drove in three runs.

St. Joe’s Redmond Floyd picked up his first win of the summer has he went six innings and allowed five runs on three hits.  He struck out three and walked three batters.

Jace Anderson earned the save as he threw three scoreless innings of relief.  Anderson gave up just one run and he struck out five.

The Mustangs improve to 8-5 this season and 6-5 in the MINK League.

St. Joseph returns home Wednesday to host Chillicothe at 7:00 p.m. inside Phil Welch Stadium.  The game will air live on 680 KFEQ and 680KFEQ.com.

Kansas City’s win streak ends at six with 3-2 loss to Tigers

RoyalsMax Scherzer won his ninth straight decision, and the Detroit Tigers beat Kansas City 3-2 to snap the Royals’ six-game winning streak on Tuesday night.

Scherzer became the first Tigers starter to begin the season 9-0 since Vern Kennedy in 1938 by pitching seven sharp innings.

He limited the Royals to three hits and two runs, while striking out six and walking two.

Aaron Crow (2-2), who was a college teammate of Scherzer’s at Missouri, took the loss after pitching out of a bases loaded jam in the seventh.

Crow hit Miguel Cabrera with a pitch to start the eighth. Cabrera advanced to third on Prince Fielder’s single to right on a full count and scored on Victor Martinez’s sacrifice fly to left. That was the first run allowed by the Kansas City bullpen in 21 innings.

Jose Valverde struggled in the ninth inning for his ninth save in 11 opportunities.

Salvador Perez led off with a single and Elliot Johnson ran for him and stole second on the first pitch.

Valverde struck out Billy Butler looking on a full-count pitch. Butler was ejected by plate umpire Jordan Baker for arguing the call. Valverde then retired Lorenzo Cain on an infield popup and David Lough on a grounder to preserve the victory.

Wade Davis, who is 1-5 in his past 10 starts, departed in eh seventh after giving up Omar Infante’s third hit. Davis permitted two runs on eight hits, while striking out five and walking one.

Tim Collins replaced Davis and allowed an 0-2 single to pinch hitter Avisail Garcia and walked Matt Tuiasosopo on five pitches to load the bases.

Crow was summoned to face Torii Hunter and struck him out on four pitches to end the inning.

Don Kelly’s single in the second scored Martinez with the first Detroit run. Infante scored on Andy Dirks’ fielder’s choice ground out in the fifth.

Lough homered, his first in the majors, off Scherzer (9-0) to lead off the bottom of the fifth. Alcides Escobar singled home Mike Moustakas with the second run of the inning to tie the score at 2-all.

— Associated Press —

Wacha earns first win as Cardinals beat up on New York, 9-2

CardsMichael Wacha had combed his hair and dressed in a button-down shirt, all ready at his locker not long after a beer shower to celebrate his first major league win.

Just as he did on the mound, the St. Louis rookie got cleaned up quick.

Wacha recovered from a wild start and Allen Craig hit a three-run homer for the Cardinals in a 9-2 victory over the staggering New York Mets on Tuesday night.

”It’s an unbelievable feeling,” Wacha said. ”Hopefully, there’s more to come.”

Matt Holliday had three hits and the NL Central leaders took full advantage of a crucial error by new Mets first baseman Daniel Murphy, who was shifted over from second after slumping Ike Davis got demoted to the minors Sunday.

David Freese extended his career-best hitting streak to 20 games, longest in the majors this season, and Wacha (1-0) even knocked in a run with a groundout for his first RBI.

The 21-year-old righty walked three batters and fell behind 2-0 in a 37-pitch first inning but worked his way through it and soon settled in.

”The first inning was rough,” he said. ”Just didn’t have any command over my pitches. After I got out of the first I just told myself, just flush it out and just forget about it and just go out and attack the hitters the next couple of innings.”

Omar Quintanilla homered for the Mets, who gave up a major league-high seven unearned runs and lost for the seventh time in eight games since a season-best five-game winning streak that included a four-game sweep of the Subway Series against the New York Yankees. They dropped 13 games under .500, their lowest mark of the year.

Jeremy Hefner (1-6) had a 2-1 lead until St. Louis scored five unearned runs in the fifth, capped by Craig’s fifth homer. The outburst began when Jon Jay reached on a leadoff grounder to Murphy, who knocked it down on his backhand but rushed a high, off-balance throw to Hefner covering first.

”It’s a groundball that I should have handled, but I booted it,” Murphy said. ”It’s not my first time playing first base, and it gave them life.”

Pete Kozma doubled and Hefner slammed down the rosin bag after Wacha’s grounder to shortstop tied the score. Matt Carpenter walked, Yadier Molina put the Cardinals ahead with an RBI groundout and Holliday reached on an infield single before Craig drove an 0-1 pitch to left-center for a 6-2 advantage.

At his best in clutch situations, Craig came in batting .400 with runners in scoring position – the same average he had last year.

”You just can’t say it’s a fluke when a guy does what he’s done,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. ”It’s for real. He’s just got a knack for getting it done.”

St. Louis, which owns baseball’s best record at 42-22, added two in the seventh after Kirk Nieuwenhuis misplayed a deep fly to right for an error. Holliday had an RBI single and reliever Josh Edgin, just recalled from Triple-A Las Vegas, walked Jay with the bases loaded to force in another run.

”Their lineup is a test,” Mets manager Terry Collins said. ”They hit to all fields. They hit to all fields with power. They stay focused pitch after pitch.”

Shane Robinson, who replaced Craig in right field, homered in the ninth off David Aardsma to make it 9-2.

Craig made a painful-looking catch in the third when he fell at the base of the wall, where his neck and the back of his head snapped back and hit the fence.

”I feel all right. Probably going to be a little sore tomorrow, but not a big deal,” Craig said. ”It definitely jarred me a little bit.”

Wacha, drafted 19th overall a year ago out of Texas A&M, was making his third major league start after an impressive outing against Kansas City and a shaky one vs. Arizona.

Pitching on the road for the first time, he gave up a home run to his second batter. Marlon Byrd hit a sacrifice fly and the bases were loaded when Nieuwenhuis hit a grounder up the middle that appeared headed for center field and a two-run single that would have given New York a 4-0 lead.

Kozma, however, was positioned perfectly at shortstop and made a nice play to end the inning.

It was the sort of play that often goes unnoticed, but it stopped the Mets in their tracks. Wacha did not walk another batter and yielded five hits over six solid innings before Randy Choate and Keith Butler finished up.

”He just was out of rhythm and every pitcher goes through it,” Matheny said. ”Some of ’em are able to still end up in the sixth inning.”

New York did not manage a hit after Jordany Valdespin’s leadoff single in the fifth. With Davis sent down, Valdespin is getting an opportunity to play regularly at second base, his natural position.

— Associated Press —

Royals sign second-round pick Cody Reed

riggertRoyalsThe Kansas City Royals just announced on Royals Live on Fox Sports Kansas City that they have agreed to terms with second-round pick Cody Reed, a left-handed pitcher from Northwest Mississippi Community College.

It brings the Royals’ total to 18 of its 41 selections signed from last week’s Rule 4 First-Year Player Draft.

Reed, a 6-foot-5, 220-pound southpaw, led the Northwest Mississippi with 8 wins and set a new single-season school record with 96 strikeouts in 73.1 innings. At one point during the season, Reed struck out 57 batters in five starts, including a career-high 15 against Coahoma in a 1-hit shutout.

He was 8-3 with a 2.39 ERA and opponents hit just .201 against him. An NJCAA Third Team All-American, NJCAA All-Region 23 and MACJC First Team All-State selection, Reed ends his Northwest career as the school’s all-time leader in strikeouts (161), wins (16), innings pitched (137.2), batters faced (601), starts (23) and shutouts (five).

— Royals Media Relations —

St. Joseph splits doubleheader at Joplin

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs split a doubleheader Monday night at Joplin as they lost game one, 13-3, and came back to win game two, 10-7.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team is now 7-5 this season and 5-5 in the MINK League.

In game one, the Mustangs scored the first inning, but Joplin answered right back as they scored five in the second inning and four more in the third off of St. Joseph starter Jonathan McCann.

McCann suffered his first loss of the summer as he lasted just 2.2 innings and allowed nine runs on nine hits.

Kris Koeper led the Mustangs with three hits and an RBI, while Payton Scarbrough and Kyle Richard each went 2-for-4.

In game two, St. Joseph scored three runs in the top of the sixth inning to grab a 6-4 lead, but Joplin answered right back with three of their own and grab a 7-6 lead after six.

The game was a seven inning game so the Mustangs were down to their final three outs, but Keegan Smith led off with a single, Shane O’Connell was hit by a pitch and Emilio Villanueva walked to load the bases.  Michael Schulze was 0-for-4 as he came to the plate, but he hit his first career gland slam and his second home run of the season to put St. Joe back in front.

Ethan Appleby came on and struck out the side in the bottom of the seventh to earn the save.

Zac Johnson, Kris Koerper, Kyle Simpson and Keegan Smith all had two hits for the Mustangs, while Johnson and Villanueva scored two runs each.

The Mustangs and Outlaws play again Tuesday night in Joplin as the first pitch is set for 7:00 p.m.

Kansas State falls just short of CWS with 4-3 loss to Oregon State

KSUAs it did all season long, Kansas State battled until the very last out as the 13th-ranked Wildcats scored two runs in the eighth inning and put the tying run on base in the bottom of the ninth, but No. 3 Oregon State held on for a 4-3 victory and earned a trip to the College World Series Monday evening in the final game of the Corvallis Super Regional.

K-State finished its season at 45-19 to set the school record for wins, while the 2013 campaign marked the first conference championship in 80 years and the program’s first ever trip to the Super Regional round. The Beavers, who improved to 50-11, will take on Mississippi State in the first game of the College World Series on Saturday.

With little offense to speak of through the first seven innings, the Wildcats put two runners on base with two out in the eighth, trailing 4-1. Blair DeBord pulled a 0-2 pitch that landed just inside the left-field line to score a pair of runs and get the Wildcats to within one.

The double knocked Oregon State starting pitcher Ben Wetzler (9-1) out of the game and the Beavers called upon Matt Boyd – who opened the series on the mound – for his first relief outing of the year. The left-hander battled RJ Santigate, who looped a single into left field that fell in front of a diving Michael Conforto. K-State sent DeBord home, but the Oregon State sophomore was able to pick up the ball and throw a strike to the plate, ending the inning and preserving the one-run lead.

Matt Wivinis tossed a scoreless ninth, tying to set up the Wildcat offense for same ninth-inning heroics they displayed in the first game of the series. Ross Kivett beat out an infield single with one out to put the tying run on base, but Boyd forced two fly outs to end the contest.

“This is one of the only times that I have been speechless all year,” head coach Brad Hill said. “I have to give a lot of credit to Oregon State – they have great starting pitching and really held us down. We could never really gain any momentum until late in the game. We made a couple mistakes that exposed us early, and that is baseball. We fought back and did what we have done all year long. We didn’t quit and we fought back and had an opportunity, but just came up a run short tonight unfortunately.”

Wetzler threw a career-high 131 pitches in his 7.2 innings and was able to effectively work around nine hits and five walks. The Wildcats out-hit the Beavers, 11-6, but K-State hit into two double plays, stranded nine runners and surrendered a pair of unearned runs.

Danny Hayes got the Beavers on the board with a two-run homer in the second inning before unearned runs in consecutive frames. Ryan Barnes reached on a two-out error in the fourth and came around to score on a Kavin Keyes double off the right-field wall. However, the Wildcats were able to limit the damage as they threw out Keyes at third base to end the frame.

With a runner on third and two out in the fifth, Andy Peterson hit a weak ground ball to Austin Fisher, who couldn’t find the handle, as Oregon State built a lead to 4-0.

The Wildcats scored their first run in the sixth inning when Kivett laced a leadoff single into center field and scored on a Jared King single into right-center field. Kansas State looked for the big inning as Tanner Witt followed Kivett with a single of his own, but a double play prior to King’s hit helped Oregon State’s cause.

Catcher Jake Rodriguez paced the Beavers offensively by going 2-for-3. Santigate led K-State with a 3-for-4 effort, while DeBord and Kivett registered two hits apiece. Kivett finished the year with a team-leading 94 hits to tie for third place in school history, just three shy of the school record.

Kansas State right-hander Jake Matthys (9-2) suffered the loss in his first-career start by allowing four runs – only two of which were earned – on three hits with a walk and a career-high tying five strikeouts. The 2013 Big 12 Freshman of the Year tied his career-long outing by lasting 4.1 innings, while his 75 pitches were a career high.

The bullpen team of Wivinis, Gerardo Esquivel and Nate Williams kept K-State in the game as they combined for 4.2 scoreless innings, giving up only three hits with three walks and four strikeouts.

— KSU Sports Information —

Guthrie, Perez lead Royals past Detroit for sixth straight win

RoyalsJeremy Guthrie pitched impressively into the seventh inning, Salvador Perez hit a two-run triple and the Kansas City Royals beat the Detroit Tigers 3-2 Monday night for their sixth straight victory.

Guthrie (7-3) limited the Tigers to a two-run homer by Miguel Cabrera in 6 1-3 innings in helping the Royals to extend their longest winning streak since they won seven straight in September 2011. He gave up six hits and walked three.

Aaron Crow replaced Guthrie after he gave up a single to Avisail Garcia and he hit Andy Dirks with an 0-2 pitch. Crow retired Torii Hunter on a fly to shallow right and struck out Cabrera to end the threat.

Cabrera, who tops the American League with 90 hits and 69 RBIs, hit his 18th home run in the second after Hunter doubled.

Perez’s one-out triple in the third scored Alcides Escobar and Eric Hosmer after they each singled. Lorenzo Cain’s two-out infield single scored Perez with the go-ahead run.

Doug Fister (5-4), who is 0-3 in five starts since a victory May 14 over Houston, went the distance. He allowed three runs on nine hits.

Greg Holland worked a flawless ninth for his 13th save in 15 opportunities.

The Royals are 7-2 in June after losing 20 of 28 games in May. The pitching staff has a 1.44 ERA in June.

The Royals improved to 8-3 since George Brett was named the interim hitting coach on May 30.

— Associated Press —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File