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Royals take down Texas in 10 innings, 4-1

RoyalsDavid Lough was willing to endure a little pain to help the Kansas City Royals win.

Robbie Ross hit Lough with a pitch with the bases loaded to force in the go-ahead run in the 10th inning, and the Royals beat the Texas Rangers 4-1 Saturday.

Lough thought he had a broken right wrist when he left the game after getting plunked. His fears worsened when he couldn’t move his fingers for about 20 minutes.

Lough was finally able to enjoy the three-run 10th inning that lifted the Royals to only their second win in 11 games.

”I had the X-rays and a lot of strength came back in my arm after that,” Lough said. ”I’m glad we got the win more than anything.”

Ross (2-1) had only allowed one run in 24-1-3 innings this season before Saturday.

The left-hander gave up a leadoff single to Alcides Escobar in the 10th. Eric Hosmer followed with a single and Billy Butler was intentionally walked to load the bases. Ross struck out Mike Moustakas and Lorenzo Cain before Lough came up. Lough was hit on a 2-1 pitch to force in the go-ahead run.

That snapped Ross’ scoring streak at 20 1-3 innings.

”Stuff is going to happen no matter what,” Ross said. ”I have to bounce back and get back to helping the team win.”

Lough left the game after getting plunked with a fastball in the right arm. The rookie outfielder tried to stay in the game but slowly walked off the field in obvious pain as he was replaced by pinch-runner Jeff Francoeur.

George Kottaras, who entered the game in the ninth inning, lined a two-run double over the head of Nelson Cruz in right.

The Royals had only scored 22 runs in their past 10 games and were 0 for 9 with runners in scoring position before Kottaras broke the game open.

”It was a big win,” Kansas City manager Ned Yost said. ”(Ross) is one of their guys who has been throwing good.”

Aaron Crow (1-1) pitched 1 1-3 innings of scoreless relief and Greg Holland worked a perfect 10th for his ninth save in 11 chances.

The Rangers had runners on second and third with two outs in the ninth but Crow retired Jurickson Profar on a foul pop to end the threat.

James Shields, who had lost his last four starts, allowed one run in seven innings as he looked to win for the first time since April 30. He gave up five hits, struck out five and walked one.

In Shields’ previous four starts, the Royals had only scored seven runs behind him.

”I don’t care about run support as much as winning the game,” Shields said. ”I’ve got to do a better job pitching.”

Nick Tepesch made his first career start against his hometown team and allowed an unearned run in 6 1-3 innings. The rookie gave up seven hits and struck out two.

Texas third baseman Adrian Beltre left the game after the ninth inning with tightness in his left hamstring. Beltre was injured running the bases in the fourth.

Rangers manager Ron Washington said Beltre is day to day.

Texas designated hitter Lance Berkman was ejected for arguing a called third strike in the first inning.

Berkman took a 2-2 pitch from Shields that home plate umpire Todd Tichenor ruled was a third strike.

The Rangers’ first-year designated hitter was tossed from the game after a brief argument with Tichenor.

”I didn’t think I said or did anything that would warrant the ejection,” Berkman said ”But he obviously felt different.”

Shields retired 10 in a row before the Rangers scored in the fourth.

Beltre and Cruz singled with two outs. Mitch Moreland then lofted a soft single to center that scored Beltre and put the Rangers ahead 1-0.

Tepesch grew up in Blue Springs, Mo., about 15 minutes from Kansas City’s Kauffman Stadium. The right-hander needed only eight pitches to retire the side in the first and recorded nine groundball outs through four innings.

Kansas City tied the game in the fifth when Lough singled with one out and scored on A.J. Pierzynski’s passed ball.

— Associated Press —

Wildcats defeat Bryant to advance to NCAA Regional Championship

KSUKansas State centerfielder Jared King made a diving catch to save a pair of runs in the fifth and promptly hit a two-RBI double the next half-inning to break a 1-1 tie and spark the Wildcats to a 7-1 victory over Bryant Saturday in the winner’s bracket of the 2013 NCAA Manhattan Regional at Tointon Family Stadium.

The top-seeded Wildcats, who tied their single-season record for wins as they improved to 43-17, move to the championship round of the Manhattan Regional Sunday night at 7 p.m., and will face the winner of the Bryant vs. Arkansas game, which will be played at 2 p.m., Sunday afternoon. With the loss, the Bulldogs fell to 45-17-1.

With the game tied and two on and two out in the bottom of the fifth, Joe Flattery (5-4) threw a first-pitch fastball to Kevin Brown who hit a sinking line drive into the right-center field gap. King laid out for the ball and caught it a foot from the ground to end the inning and strand the two runners.

The effort ignited a Wildcat offense that had troubles against Bryant starting pitcher Craig Schlitter (10-4), who had retired 15 of the previous 16 batters. After Ross Kivett reached on a leadoff error and was sacrificed over to second base, Shane Conlon singled to left field to put runners on the corners and knock Schlitter out of the game.

A switch hitter, King flipped around to bat right handed against left-hander John Heally and shot a 2-2 pitch into the same gap he robbed a pair of Bulldog runs to give the Cats a 3-1 advantage. K-State added two more on a passed ball and a two-out error to take a four-run lead at 5-1.

“I thought it was another tough game again tonight,” head coach Brad Hill said. “It was a great pitching matchup. Both guys got settled in after that first inning and it was just a well-pitched ballgame that came down to just a tremendous play that Jared made that swung momentum our way, which we carried right into our offense. We scored some runs right after that inning, which was a huge swing in momentum right there and that was pretty much the game.”

Flattery allowed just one run while working around seven hits and a walk with three strikeouts in his first appearance since May 18 against Oklahoma. After allowing a run on a ground out by John Mullen in the first, the left-hander stranded two runners in the second and pitched consecutive 1-2-3 innings in the third and fourth before benefitting from King’s defensive work in the fifth.

“Before that pitch, Coach (Hill) had me in the other gap. He saw a couple swings from the batter, and he made the adjustment the pitch before for me to shade over to the other side,” King said about his catch. “I was just lucky that I caught it, I guess. I tried to track it as much as I could and I gave my best effort to try to catch it. The catch was a big momentum swing for our team and to be able to tack on those runs in the inning (after the catch) was big.”

Jake Matthys, who entered with runners on first and second in the seventh inning, needed just 26 pitches to record the final seven outs of the game and pick up his eighth save of the year. Matthys’ outing was his 31st this year, tying the single-season school record for relief appearances, while his eight saves extended his hold on the K-State freshman record and are tied for sixth overall in school history.

Nate Williams also threw 1.2 scoreless innings as the K-State pitching staff allowed just three hits for the final seven innings.

Kivett registered his second-straight multi-hit game of the NCAA Tournament by going 2-for-5 with a RBI and two runs scored. The Big 12 Player of the Year scored in the first inning on a RBI single off the bat of Tanner Witt, while Kivett produced a RBI ground out in the ninth inning. Blair DeBord added another run in the ninth when he scored on a wild pitch.

Conlon also registered his 24th multi-hit game of the year by going 2-for-4 with a run. Austin Fisher doubled in the fourth inning to push his season total to 20, which is tied for fourth in school history in a single season. He was also hit by a pitch and scored in the sixth inning.

Schlitter allowed three runs (two earned) on four hits with no walks and six strikeouts in 5.1 innings. All six of the right-hander’s strikeouts came during his stretch of retiring 15 of 16 hitters. Catcher Jonathan Scott was the only Bulldog with a multi-hit game as he went 2-for-2 with a walk.

— KSU Sports Information —

Miller, Wainwright lead St. Louis to doubleheader sweep of Giants

CardsAdam Wainwright refused to relax against a makeshift San Francisco Giants squad.

Pitching against the Giants missing stars Buster Posey and Pablo Sandoval, Wainwright struck out 10 in his 14th complete game and third this season, and the St. Louis Cardinals completed a day-night doubleheader sweep of the San Francisco Giants with a 7-1 win Saturday night.

”You look at a lineup and you don’t see some of their boppers in there,” Wainwright said. ”Those are key parts of their lineup. You can very easily go out there and take it for granted and give up a couple of runs because you’re not ready to pitch.

”My thought today was to just respect all those guys over there and make sure I was ready to pitch,” he said.

Rookie Shelby Miller was also ready. He pitched six-hit ball for seven innings and backup catcher Tony Cruz hit two doubles and drove in a pair of runs for St. Louis in an 8-0 win in the opener.

Wainwright (8-3) allowed eight hits and one run without walking a batter to close out the first doubleheader between the Giants and Cardinals in St. Louis since July 16, 1978. Wainwright threw 106 pitches and 73 strikes.

”I didn’t feel like I had the best jump on my heater I’ve ever had,” Wainwright said. ”But I was locating it and my other stuff felt great. You can go a tick or two down in velocity and locate and still get the job done.”

Carlos Beltran and Ty Wigginton each had two hits and drove in two runs for the Cardinals. Jon Jay, Daniel Descalso and Shayne Robinson had the other RBIs.

Dt. Louis manager Mike Matheny was happy to see his reserves contribute.

”All the way around, the guys made good plays,” Matheny said. ”Whenever you see your bench guys, you know they’re doing the right work. So, very impressive.”

The Giants had little to celebrate, as they managed just one run in 18 innings.

”It was a tough day, no getting around it,” said Giants manager Bruce Bochy. ”We scored one run. They played great. We didn’t pitch great. We didn’t hit the ball great. That’s a good team over there.”

Wainwright also helped with his bat when the Cardinals broke through against San Francisco’s Madison Bumgarner (4-4) with three runs in the third.

Pete Kozma started the inning with a walk, and he advanced to third when Wainwright followed with a double to left-center. Kozma scored on a fielder’s choice to first by Jay, and one out later, Beltran drove Wainwright and Jay home with a single to center.

Bumgarner lasted six innings and allowed five runs on six hits with one walk and six strikeouts.

In the opener, Miller (6-3) scattered six hits, stranding seven runners. His ERA dropped to 1.82. Miller struck out seven with one walk.

Matt Cain (4-3) allowed seven runs in six innings, falling to 0-3 at Busch Stadium with an 8.87 ERA in four starts.

Cain struggled in the third, when he threw 40 pitches. In the other five innings he pitched, Cain set the Cardinals down in order. He threw 101 pitches, striking out nine with no walks.

The Cardinals had seven runs on nine hits – seven singles and two doubles – in the third when St. Louis sent 12 men to the plate.

Cruz, starting at catcher instead of Yadier Molina, smacked a two-run double. Descalso hit a double and a single while Kozma had two singles in the outburst.

— Associated Press —

Mustangs open season with 7-0 victory over Rossville

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs opened their 2013 season in impressive fashion Friday night as they defeated Rossville (KS), 7-0, at Phil Welch Stadium.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team began its fifth year quickly as they scored three runs in the first to take an early lead.  Kris Koerper drove in a run with a double,  Shane Segovia had an RBI ground out and Grant Fink knocked in a run with a two-out single.

That was all Mustangs’ starting pitcher Aaron Baker would need as he went seven innings and allowed two hits and no runs.  He struck out nine batters and walked just one.

St. Joseph added one run in the sixth inning and Fink highlighted a three-run seven innings with a two-out double that scored two runs.

Fink finished 3-for-4 with three RBI, while Michael Schulze went 3-for-5 with two runs and Koeper added two runs, two runs and one RBI.

The Mustangs are back at home Saturday night as they play Nevada in their first MINK League game of the season.  The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m. and can be heard on 680 KFEQ and 680kfeq.com.

Kansas City falls in series opener at Texas

RoyalsThe Texas Rangers were unbeatable in May with Derek Holland on the mound.

While Yu Darvish is still the Texas ace, Holland struck out eight and allowed only one earned run over seven innings to wrap up his undefeated month in a 7-2 victory over the weary Kansas City Royals on Friday night.

”He’s certainly pitching well. He was outstanding again,” manager Ron Washington said. ”Once again, he stayed out of the fat part of the plate, and off the fat part of the bat for the most part. If Yu Darvish wasn’t on the staff we have right now, I guess you’d say Derek would probably be the ace.”

Holland (5-2) went 4-0 with a 2.31 ERA in six May starts, matching a career best for wins in any month. The Rangers, who have the best record in the American League, won all six of those games started by the left-hander.

After Holland gave up a run in the top of the third against the Royals, Nelson Cruz hit a long tiebreaking three-run homer in the bottom of the inning to put Texas ahead to stay.

”The offense is going to do their part as long as I do mine,” Holland said. ”My job is to limit the damage. I thought I did a nice job of that. And our guys came back and did what they’re capable of doing, get some runs.”

The Royals, after playing until 3:14 a.m. Friday for a victory at St. Louis, led 1-0 after Adam Moore led off the third with a double and scored on a single by Alcides Escobar. They still had two runners on before a comebacker and an inning-ending grounder.

”That’s part of the reason we’ve been struggling a little bit. You get second and third with one out and we take the lead, have an opportunity to tack some more on, and we just couldn’t,” Kansas City manager Ned Yost said.

”They’re giving us a run, they’re playing the infield back and we couldn’t take advantage of it, we hit the ball to the pitcher and we can’t get a two-out hit. … That’s the way things have been going.”

The Royals finished 8-20 in May, losing nine of their last 10 games.

Cruz pulled a ball an estimated 419 feet, his 13th homer hitting a scoreboard high above the first section of seats in left field, to make it 4-1 against Wade Davis (3-5).

”It’s just a weird day, it was a weird day,” Davis said. ”I was a little sluggish, but I made good pitches, I just made one bad one. ”

Adrian Beltre led off the Rangers seventh off the Royals second reliever with his 11th homer, his fourth hit of the game. It was his fourth four-hit game this season – all in May, the first Texas player with four such games in a month. He had 44 hits in May and is hitting .306, over .300 for the first time this season.

Beltre’s eight-game hitting streak includes multiple hits in five of his past seven games. He had an RBI single right before the Cruz homer.

”When you see Adrian recognize a breaking ball and go down to his knee and it leaves the ballpark, you know he’s swinging the bat well,” Washington said.

The Rangers (34-20) have played exactly one-third of their regular season, and matched their most wins at this point.

Kansas City had an eight-game losing streak before the win over the Cardinals. That game started an hour late because of rain, and then had another 4 1/2-hour delay after the Royals took the lead with three runs in the top of the ninth in George Brett’s first game as their hitting coach.

The Royals got to their Texas hotel about 7 a.m. Friday – right fielder Jeff Francoeur said the sun was coming up and people were already having breakfast as team members headed to their rooms.

Davis had a season-high eight strikeouts with no walks in what was otherwise another tough start against Texas, giving up six runs and 10 hits in five-plus innings. The right-hander is 0-3 with a 17.18 ERA in three starts against the Rangers. He twice started for Tampa Bay against them, giving up seven runs in 2 2-3 innings and then eight runs in 3 1-3 innings.

The last batter Davis faced was A.J. Pierzynski, who hit a ball that ricocheted off the padding on the top of the 8-foot wall in straightaway center.

Pierzynski rounded first base with his right hand extended above his head signaling home run. Washington went out to question the play with the umpires, who did go look at the replay that showed clearly that the ball stayed in the park.

After reliever Bruce Chen walked Jurickson Profar to load the bases, No. 9 hitter Leonys Martin hit a two-run double.

— Associate Press —

Kansas State opens NCAA tournament with big win over Wichita State

KSUKansas State scored nine first-inning runs to set the tone for the afternoon, while second baseman Ross Kivett hit a pair of home runs as the top-seeded Wildcats opened the 2013 NCAA Manhattan Regional with a 20-11 victory over No. 4-seed Wichita State Friday afternoon at Tointon Family Stadium.

K-State, which scored in every inning except the second, improved to 42-17 on the year and will face the winner of the evening session between No. 2-seed Arkansas and third-seeded Bryant at 7 p.m., Saturday evening. Wichita State fell to 39-27 on the year and will face the loser of Friday’s evening matchup in an elimination game at 2 p.m., Saturday afternoon.

The Wildcats scored their 20 runs on 19 hits as eight of the nine starters recorded at least one hit and six had multi-hit games. Kansas State also coaxed nine walks from Wichita State pitching and was hit by a pitch six times, the second-most ever in a NCAA Tournament game. Kivett led the way with four hits and four RBI, while Tanner Witt also had four hits and drove in one run and Jon Davis had four RBI.

Kansas State’s 20 runs were the most in its NCAA Tournament history, topping a 16-run effort against Xavier in 2009, while they were the most by a Wildcat team overall since a 20-2 victory over Chicago State on April 28, 2010. K-State’s 19 hits were also a season high and the most since collecting 21 at San Diego State early in 2012.

The Wildcats were not without their faults, however, as they allowed five two-run innings and gave up their second-most runs in a NCAA Regional game.

“That was kind of an ugly game,” head coach Brad Hill said. “Neither team wanted to play like that. It was ugly, but we won and that is the good thing about it. Offensively, we did a tremendous job of covering ourselves today. Don’t get me wrong, I’m an offensive guy so I love the 20 runs, I just hate giving up 11. Give the guys a lot of credit. They did not give away at-bats today.”

After Wichita State scored two runs in the top off the first, the Wildcats sent 15 men to the plate in the bottom half, which was highlighted by two-run singles by Davis and Austin Fisher. K-State also received RBI singles by Mitch Meyer and Witt, a pair of bases-loaded walks by Davis and Jared King, while another run scored on an error.

The nine runs in the first inning were the most by a Wildcat team in a NCAA Regional game, topping an eight-run third inning in K-State’s first-ever regional game against Xavier in 2009. The 11 combined runs in the first inning tied a NCAA record for first-inning runs in a tournament game.

Kivett, who had one career home run coming into the contest, recorded two-run homers over the left-field wall in both the sixth and seventh innings, the latter extending K-State’s lead to 18-9. His two home runs were the most by a Wildcat since King had two at CSU Bakersfield in 2011.

Meyer went 2-for-5 and drove in three runs, including a two-run double in the third inning. Fisher, who has had just one at-bat in the last five games, earned his first start since the opener against Oklahoma and shined by going 3-for-4 with three RBI. Fisher has a hit in 19 of his last 20 games as he lost an 18-game hitting streak in last week’s Big 12 Championship by going 0-for-1 against Texas Tech before being pulled due to an injury.

Left-handed reliever Jared Moore (4-0) earned the win after allowing two runs on four hits in 2.1 innings of work. The Boulder, Colo., product struck out a season-high four batters, including two in the third inning to put a stop to a potential big inning.

Wichita State starting pitcher Cale Elam (7-5) suffered the loss as he allowed six of the first-inning runs and recorded just one out. The Shockers had four hitters with two-hit games, including Johnny Coy, who had four RBI.

— KSU Sports Information —

Jerrance Howard added to Kansas men’s basketball staff

KUKansas men’s basketball coach Bill Self announced Friday that Jerrance Howard will join his staff as an assistant coach for the Jayhawks.

Howard comes to KU after one season in the same position on Larry Brown’s staff at SMU. He replaces Joe Dooley who left KU after 10 seasons to become the head coach at Florida Gulf Coast in April.

“Jerrance has great energy, is unbelievably positive and in a short amount of time has established himself as one of the better recruiters in college basketball,” Self said. “Having worked for one of my former assistants, Billy Gillispie, and my former mentor Larry Brown, I’m totally comfortable with him coming in here, having a smooth transition and having an immediate, positive impact on our program.”

Prior to SMU, where the Mustangs were 15-17 in Brown’s first year, Howard spent the previous five seasons as an assistant coach at his alma mater, Illinois. While at UI he earned a reputation as one of the top young assistant coaches in the country and one of the nation’s best recruiters. Before Illinois, Howard spent three-plus seasons on Billy Gillispie’s staffs at Texas A&M and Kentucky.

“Being around Coach Brown and hearing all the great stories about when he was at Kansas, I’ve been overwhelmed,” Howard said of becoming a KU assistant. “Coach Brown talks about the great players like Danny Manning, the tradition and the history. Kansas is the mecca. I’ve been excited and haven’t slept in two days. It’s a great feeling to be at Kansas and with my former coach.

“I am really grateful to learn and coach under Coach Brown this past year at SMU,” Howard said. “He’s a Hall of Fame coach and I will take a lot from my time on his staff.”

A Peoria, Ill., native, Howard was a four-year letterwinner for the Fighting Illini from 2001-04, including three seasons for Self. During his career, Illinois compiled a record of 104-31 overall and 48-16 in the Big Ten Conference. The Illini won three Big Ten championships (2001, 2002, 2004), a Big Ten Tournament title (2003) and appeared in the NCAA Tournament all four years, advancing to the Elite Eight in 2001 and the Sweet 16 in both 2002 and 2004.

“I’ll bring energy and enthusiasm every day,” Howard said. “I’ve been in the trenches like the other coaches, fighting with that energy every day in practice, preparation and all aspects of the program. I have a great relationship with Norm Roberts and I love Kurtis Townsend. I’m really looking forward to and am excited about being on staff and learning from those guys. They are two of the best guys in the business.”

Howard brings with him a strong playing career, over half of which was spent under Self. He played point guard for the Illini, backing up All-Americans Frank Williams, Dee Brown and Deron Williams.

“Jerrance is one of my all-time favorite players,” Self said. “Even though he didn’t play a lot, he found a way to impact our program and probably had as much to do with us winning games as anybody on our team in the years I was at Illinois.”

Howard developed a reputation as the program’s inspirational leader was a team captain his junior and senior seasons. He also was a two-time winner of the Kenny Battle Award, an accolade voted upon by the players and coaches and given to an Illini who earns the respect of his teammates through hard work and effort in games and practice each day.

“This came about from me playing for Coach Self at Illinois,” Howard said. “We did some special things – winning Big Ten titles and going to the Elite Eight – but it was Coach Self who inspired me to coach basketball. I remember him after practice one day asking ‘have you ever thought about coaching?’ and I said ‘not really’ and he said ‘well you need to think about it.’ I credit Coach Self getting me started in my coaching career.”

Howard earned a bachelor’s degree in speech communication from the University of Illinois in 2004. He is married to the former Jessica Wordlaw, who also is an Illinois graduate. The Howards have a son, Jerrance Jr., and a daughter, Jaya Brooklyn-Rose.

“One of the important fits for me in selecting an assistant coach is that I wanted someone who is loyal, a tireless worker, has great contacts and will bring something to the table recruiting-wise,” Self said. “From a basketball standpoint, I wanted someone that through their experiences could also add to what we are doing and Jerrance can certainly do that. We have an unbelievable staff and I wanted someone who fit well with Norm (Roberts) and Kurtis (Townsend) and both those guys are very excited about adding Jerrance to the mix.”

— KU Sports Information —

Missouri Western’s Fink named to the Academic All-America 2nd Team

MWSUMissouri Western senior third baseman Grant Fink has been named to the Capital One Academic All-America second team by the College Sports Information Directors of America..

The Spokane, Washington, native earned the award for the first time in his career. Fink was also a first team Capital One Academic All-District 7 and he has a 3.43 GPA in Sports Management.

Fink finished the season with a .397 batting average and tied an MWSU single season record with 14 home runs.

He also 77 hits, 14 doubles, 40 runs scored, 51 RBI, 137 total bases, and finished with a .706 slugging percentage and a .451 on base percentage.

Fink had a .959 fielding percentage making 44 putouts and 95 assists with just six errors. He has been on numerous All-America teams and is a finalist for the Tino Martinez Award which is given to the top player in Division II.

The Griffons won their first MIAA Championship in school history and finished the season with a 40-12 overall record, making just their second trip to the NCAA Tournament in program history.

— MWSU Sports Information —

MWSU’s Schulze named NCBWA DII Player of the Year; three others also earn All-America honors

MWSUFour Missouri Western baseball players earn Division II All-Region and All-America honors from the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA). Michael Schulze continued to bring in the awards being named the national and regional Player of the Year which included being named first team All-American and All-Region. Grant Fink and Bubba Dotson were named first team All-Region and second team All-America while Brandon Simmons was named first team All-Region and honorable mention All-America.

This is the third All-American honor for Schulze as he was named the National Player of the Year and First Team All-America by Daktronics. He was the MIAA and Daktronics Regional Player of the Year hitting .439 on the year for the Griffons scoring 70 runs while adding 17 stolen bases. He had 24 extra base hits and drove in 49 runs. He was also a First Team All-America selection by American Baseball Coaches Association along with being named the Central Region Player of the Year and a first team selection.

On the second team are teammates Grant Fink, Bubba Dotson. This is their third selection on All-America teams. Fink hit .397 for the year hitting 14 home runs and driving in 51 runs. He is also a finalist for the Tino Martinez Player of the Year Award and was a First Team All-America selection by Daktronics and Second Team selection by American Baseball Coaches Association. Dotson hit .359 for the season with 13 home runs and 59 RBI being named to the Daktronics All-American First Team and ABCA Second Team.

Brandon Simmons earned First Team NCBWA All-Region and Honorable Mention All-American. He became the Griffons first ever MIAA Pitcher of the Year selection and earned his second First Team All-MIAA honor this past season. He was also a First Team All-Region selection by the ABCA and Daktronics. Simmons was outstanding last season finishing with a 11-1 record. Simmons won 10 or more games twice and broke the MIAA and MWSU record for wins in a career. He won 35 games in his career. Simmons sits third in the MWSU record book in strikeouts with 228 and complete games with 20. Simmons started and appeared in 13 games with three complete games. He finished with a 2.91 ERA in 80.1 innings pitched.

The Griffons finished the season with a 40-12 overall record making just their second trip to the NCAA Tournament in school history.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Cardinals rally past Royals with four-run eighth inning

RoyalsThe rally came too late for Lance Lynn to get another win. Just in time, though, for the St. Louis Cardinals to keep the scuffling Kansas City Royals down.

Pinch-hitter Daniel Descalso hit a two-run single with the bases loaded to snap a tie in a four-run eighth and the Cardinals rallied for a 5-3 win Wednesday night, the Royals’ season-high eighth straight loss.

”It was a good comeback, we haven’t had to do that a lot this year,” Descalso said. ”Of course, I wanted to be in that spot.

”You’ve got to like that spot.”

Luis Mendoza got his first career hit and RBI and held the Cardinals to a run in 5 2-3 innings before the bullpen failed for the Royals. They dropped the first two games of the interleague series by a combined 10-4 score and have totaled 11 runs the last six games.

”We felt like we had it set up,” manager Ned Yost said. ”We just needed to execute. We battled hard to get the three runs.”

Matt Holliday and Carlos Beltran homered for the second straight night. The Cardinals have won seven of eight overall, lead the majors with a 35-17 record, and go for a sweep Thursday with touted rookie Michael Wacha making his major league debut.

”It was great, no doubt about that,” Beltran said. ”We took advantage of their bullpen and we were able to come out big.”

Randy Choate (1-0) got the last out in the eighth and Edward Mujica finished for his 17th save in 17 chances, retiring the side in order for the second straight game.

Lynn missed a chance to start out 8-1 for the second straight season, allowing two runs in seven innings but getting hurt most by Mendoza’s hit.

Mendoza joked his last hit was ”when I was 10 years old, probably.”

”I know he is going to throw a strike, just hit the ball,” the pitcher added.

Beltran hit his 12th homer off Aaron Crow (0-1) to open the eighth and David Freese tied it with a one-out RBI single. Crow intentionally walked Jon Jay to load the bases, then got Pete Kozma on a called third strike before Descalso bounced one up the middle for his first pinch-hit RBIs of the season.

The Cardinals have won six in a row in the series. They’d been 0-12 when trailing after seven innings before getting to Crow, who allowed five hits and four runs while getting just two outs and said Beltran homered on a ”real bad pitch.”

”The worst I’ve ever pitched in my career by far,” Crow said. ”I feel like I let everyone in this clubhouse down tonight.”

Royals rookie David Lough had two hits for a two-game total of six and threw out a runner at the plate. Alex Gordon had three hits and Lorenzo Cain and George Kottaras had an RBI apiece.

The Busch Stadium field showed little signs of wear six days after the mound was removed and the infield dirt covered with sod for an exhibition soccer match between English Premier League rivals Chelsea and Manchester City that drew a standing room crowd.

Mendoza retired the side in order in the first, a welcome change for the Royals after Molina and Beltran opened with two-run homers the first two games.

Lough tripled to start the fifth and was still there with two outs before Mendoza, who’d been 0 for 6 with five strikeouts for his career, singled to right to put the Royals up 2-0. Mendoza passed on what would have been a double for most players, taking his time getting to first and then speeding up briefly before slamming on the brakes.

The Royals traveled Interstate 70 by bus for the second half of the interleague series after difficulties with the team flight.

Lough earned his second outfield assist, throwing out Allen Craig trying to score from second and tie it at 1 in the fourth on a single by Yadier Molina.

— Associated Press —

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