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MWSU tennis falls to William Jewell

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western tennis team fell 8-1 in non-conference action against the William Jewell Cardinals on Monday afternoon at the Noyes Tennis Courts. The Griffons fall to 6-14 with the loss.

The Griffons picked up one victory on the day with Ceara Boldridge winning at No. 4 singles over Loree Hazelrigg by scores of 6-3, 6-2. Boldridge has now won six of her last seven singles matches which include her last three. The Griffons had a couple other close matches but were unable to come away with the victories.

Kayla Dysart fell 6-2, 6-4 in No. 3 singles against Katy Lehenbauer while Boldridge and Lindsay Beger fell 8-6 against Savannah Drew and Jaimie Baker in No. 3 doubles.

The Cardinals improve to 15-5 with the victory.

The Griffons return to action on Wednesday, April 10 with a non-conference match against Baker University in Baldwin City, Kan. Match time is set for 2:00 pm.

Singles competition
1. Stivers,Kristen (WJC) def. Smith,Meara (MWSU) 6-1, 6-1
2. Drew,Savannah (WJC) def. Chiao,Denise (MWSU) 6-1, 6-1
3. Lehenbauer,Katy (WJC) def. Dysart,Kayla (MWSU) 6-2, 6-4
4. Boldridge,Ceara (MWSU) def. Hazelrigg,Loree (WJC) 6-3, 6-2
5. Bisesi,Carli (WJC) def. Beger,Lindsay (MWSU) 6-1, 6-1
6. Hazelrigg,Conner (WJC) def. Dougan,Alyssa (MWSU) 6-3, 6-1

Doubles competition
1. Stivers,Kristen/Lehenbauer,Katy (WJC) def. Chiao,Denise/Smith,Meara (MWSU) 8-3
2. Hazelrigg,Loree/Hazelrigg,Conner (WJC) def. Dysart,Kayla/Dougan,Alyssa (MWSU) 8-2
3. Drew,Savannah/Baker,Jaimie (WJC) def. Boldridge,Ceara/Beger,Lindsay (MWSU) 8-6

— MWSU Sports Information —

Cardinals give up nine runs in the ninth and lose to Reds

CardsShin-Soo Choo is way off the hook.

The new Cincinnati center fielder made amends for two botched fly balls, drawing a leadoff walk in a nine-run ninth inning and later delivering a three-run double as the Reds spoiled the St. Louis Cardinals’ home opener with a 13-4 victory on Monday.

”I almost died and my teammates gave me another life,” Choo said. ”I really appreciate my teammates, coming over to me and saying everybody makes mistakes.

”I missed two fly balls and in my mind I had to do something to help the team.”

Mitchell Boggs (0-1), the stand-in closer for St. Louis, yielded six runs while getting only one out. Only a few thousand fans remained of the largest regular-season crowd of 47,375 for the bottom of the ninth in 8-year-old Busch Stadium history.

A day earlier, the Cardinals scored nine runs in the fourth inning against Giants ace Matt Cain.

”I think this is the worst outing of my career,” said Boggs, who has one save in two chances along with a bloated 14.54 ERA. ”I guess without saying there’s a lot of season left and I expect to be a player with a lot of good ones.”

The defending NL Central champions Cardinals held a tribute for Stan Musial before the game. They’ve lost three straight home openers and six of the last seven.

Brandon Phillips blooped a go-ahead double in the ninth. He earlier hit his 150th career homer for the Reds, who have won six of seven since losing in extra innings to the Angels on opening day and totaled 11 or more hits the last four games.

Jay Bruce had four hits and Chris Heisey doubled twice with an RBI.

Sam LeCure (1-0) pitched an inning for the win.

Cardinals lefty Jaime Garcia matched his career best with 10 strikeouts in 6 2-3 innings and left with a 4-3 lead. Yadier Molina hit both of the fly balls dropped by Choo in the first and sixth, and added an RBI single.

Pinch-hitter Xavier Paul tied it in the Reds’ eighth with an RBI single off Trevor Rosenthal before the Reds took off in the ninth with six hits, five walks and an error. The Cardinals last surrendered nine runs in the ninth in a 12-9 loss at Colorado on July 6, 2010.

Prior to the game, Musial’s four children unveiled an oversized red No. 6, the Hall of Famer’s retired jersey number, on the wall in left-center. The decal matches memorial patches worn on the team’s uniform sleeves.

Reds players stood on the top dugout steps as the Cardinals paraded around the warning track in flat-bed trucks, and Cincinnati manager Dusty Baker hugged Cardinals Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith.

Choo entered the season with 652 games of outfield experience but only 10 in center, and all 155 games with the Indians last year as the right fielder. Two runs scored in the first when Choo twice juggled Molina’s fly ball after backtracking, and Matt Holliday scored from first to put the Cardinals up 4-2 in the sixth when the ball popped out on Choo, perhaps fighting the sun.

It was the second two-error game of Choo’s career, the other coming on May 25, 2011 against the Red Sox. He’s the first Reds center fielder to commit two errors in a game since Deion Sanders on April 28, 1995, against the Padres.

”You get a little gun-shy out there, it happens,” Baker said. ”It’s a new position, a new league, a new park. Those balls went 400 feet, it’s not like they were just fly balls.”

Reds starter Mat Latos allowed one earned run in six innings, shaving his ERA to 10.23 in five career starts at Busch to 10.23.

Garcia struck out four of the first six batters and retired eight in a row before issuing a four-pitch, two-out walk to Latos in the third. He entered with a 2.48 career ERA at Busch, the stadium’s best, and his other 10-strikeout game was at home Aug. 19 against the Pirates.

”It doesn’t really matter how we lose the game, stuff happens,” Garcia said. ”You know what, they’ve got a good thing going on.”

— Associated Press —

Weather postpones Missouri Western baseball & softball

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western baseball double header scheduled for Tuesday, April 9 with Nebraska-Kearney in Kearney, Neb. has been postponed due to the weather and poor field conditions. The games may be rescheduled for Thursday, April 10 but that decision will be made on Wednesday.

Due to the weather in the St. Joseph area the Missouri Western softball double header scheduled for tomorrow, Tuesday, April 9 with the Lincoln Blue Tigers has been moved to Wednesday, Arpil 17. Game time is still scheduled for 5/7 pm from the Griffon Softball Field at the Spring Sports Complex. The double header that was scheduled for next Wendesday in Quincy, Ill. with the Quincy Hawks has not been rescheduled at this time.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Missouri Western loses series finale at Pitt State; win streak ends at nine

riggertMissouriWesternPittsburg State pitcher Matt Stalcup limited the No. 12 Missouri Western baseball team to four hits in seven innings of work and Pittsburg State snapped the Griffons nine-game winning streak with a 5-1 victory Sunday at Al Ortolani Field. The Griffons drop to 27-5 overall and 21-2 in MIAA play.

Stalcup (4-2) walked two batters and registered nine strikeouts, before leaving the game after the seventh inning with a 4-0 lead. Ryan McKay got the final six outs to lock down the win for the Gorillas.

Pitt State scored a run in the first and two more in the second to grab an early 3-0 lead against the Western.

Ryan Bilovesky had an RBI single in the first inning, while Cody Ball belted a solo home run in the second and Evan Thomas drove in the third run with an infield hit.

Ball, who went 2-for-3 with three RBI, added a sacrifice fly in the sixth and a run-scoring single in the eighth.

Missouri Western had five hits in the game with Spencer Shockley going 3-for-4 with one RBI. Ethan Ward got the loss going going 5.2 inning giving up 10 hits and four earned runs. He falls to 2-2 with the loss.

The win helped the Gorillas improve to 19-13 overall and 16-12 in MIAA play.

The Griffons return to action on Tuesday, April 9 with a double header in Kearney, Neb. against the Nebraska-Kearney Lopers. Game time is set for 1:00 pm.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Butler drives in seven as Royals hold on to defeat Philadelphia

RoyalsBilly Butler hit a grand slam that was confirmed by video review and tied a Royals franchise record with seven RBIs, and Kansas City held on for a 9-8 win over the Philadelphia Phillies on Sunday.

Butler’s fifth-inning homer, the first slam of his career and the first ever allowed by Philadelphia left-hander Cole Hamels, put Kansas City ahead 6-4.

James Shields (1-1), acquired in an offseason trade with Tampa Bay, earned his first victory as a Royal. The right-hander gave up hits to five of the first six batters in a four-run first inning, but settled down to blank the Phillies for the next five innings on five hits while striking out eight and walking none.

Butler came through with the bases loaded again in the sixth, hitting a two-run single off Chad Durbin. With the hit, Butler became the 12th Royals player have seven RBIs.

Chris Getz opened the fifth with a double to right, Alex Gordon reached on an infield single and Alcides Escobar walked to load the bases and set up Butler.

Hamels (0-2) appeared visibly upset throughout the inning, perhaps disagreeing with some close balls and strikes calls by home-plate umpire Eric Cooper. His mood didn’t improve when Butler launched a 1-0 fastball just over the metal fence that tops the green padded wall in left field. The ball hit off a wall behind the field wall and bounced back into play.

The umpires originally ruled that the ball hit off the top of the wall before going to replay to confirm that it was a homer.

The Phillies looked on their way to the loss trailing 9-4 entering the ninth before rallying.

Jimmy Rollins hit a three-run homer to right off J.C. Gutierrez. Greg Holland relieved Gutierrez with one out in the ninth. He got Chase Utley to pop out to center before singles by Ryan Howard and Michael Young, who had four hits, put runners on first and second with two outs.

Kansas City manager Ned Yost then lifted Holland, who blew the save in Saturday’s 4-3 loss to Philadelphia, and replaced him with right-hander Kelvin Herrera to face pinch-hitter Laynce Nix.

Nix singled home Howard to pull Philadelphia to 9-8 and Young and Nix advanced to second and third on a wild pitch. But Herrera struck out Erik Kratz in a nine-pitch at-bat to earn his first save.

The Phillies struck out 14 times Sunday.

Hamels struggled for the second straight start, allowing eight runs on nine hits with four walks and two strikeouts in 5 2-3 innings. Hamels opened the season by giving up five runs on seven hits in five innings in Philadelphia’s 7-5 season-opening loss at Atlanta last Monday night. The three-time All-Star has a 10.97 ERA after two starts.

Hamels looked on his way to an easy sixth inning with two outs and Shields batting, but the Royals pitcher lined a single to right. Gordon followed with a double to right, moving Shields to third and prompting Phillies manager Charlie Manuel to lift his ace for Durbin. The right-handed reliever walked Escobar to load the bases before Butler laced a single to left-center to plate two.

Ben Revere had three hits for Philadelphia, and Gordon had three hits for Kansas City.

— Associated Press —

Western women sit in 3rd after first round of Upper Iowa Invite

riggertMissouriWesternAfter day one of the Upper Iowa University Invitational the Missouri Western women’s golf team sits in 3rd place after firing a record low round 311. The event is being played at the Preserve Golf Course on Rathbun Lake.

The Griffons low rounds came from Natalie Bird and Amber Chivington both shooting 76 while Anna Kloeppel fired a 79. Callie Wilson and Casi Webb rounded out the scoring with 80 and 81 respectively.

The final round of the invite will be played Monday.

— MWSU Sports Information —

St. Louis uses 9-run 4th inning to roll past Giants

CardsMatt Carpenter has no explanation for the sudden turn of events, other than a little bit of luck and a lot of aggression.

Matt Cain became the first Giants pitcher to allow nine runs in an inning since 1902 when Carpenter and the St. Louis Cardinals tagged him Sunday in a 14-3 romp over San Francisco.

”I wasn’t as sharp as I was, for some reason, for the first three innings and it just kind of fell apart,” Cain said. ”I don’t know that they changed anything. I just started making some bad pitches and they put good swings together.”

The Cardinals chased Cain (0-1) while scoring nine times in the fourth inning. The last two runs came home on Carlos Beltran’s single off reliever Jose Mijares.

”He was great the first time through the order and then I thought we did a good job the second time being aggressive,” Carpenter said. ”Guys were battling up there and things started to roll for us and a couple of balls fell in. We did a good job of swinging at good pitches.”

According to research by the Elias Sports Bureau provided by the team, Cain was the first Giants pitcher to give up so many runs in a single inning since John Cronin on Sept. 27, 1902, in the second game of New York’s doubleheader against Brooklyn.

”It’s one of those innings we couldn’t stop the bleeding and the game got out of hand there,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. ”I can’t say there was anything different he was doing. They just threw out some pretty good at-bats.”

Adam Wainwright (1-1) pitched seven innings, giving up two runs on seven hits for his first win since signing a rich new contract at the end of spring training. He struck out six and walked none.

”Pitching against Matt you have to take that 0-0 mentality,” Wainwright said. ”I cracked first and I thought I had to keep it there for us to have a chance. Our offense did an amazing job. Against a pitcher like that you never expect anything like that.”

Cain pitched a perfect game last year and helped the Giants win their second title in three seasons. The pregame ceremony included the presentation of rings to Giants Hall of Famers Willie Mays, Willie McCovey, Orlando Cepeda, Juan Marchial and Gaylord Perry.

Cain retired the first nine batters, then gave up seven hits while getting just two outs in the fourth. Beltran, Carpenter and Matt Adams each drove in two runs during the outburst. Cain left after Carpenter’s two-run single.

”I don’t know what it is, every at-bat has been tough against him,” said Carpenter, who is 6 for 7 lifetime against Cain. ”All I can say he comes at me, gets ahead and I have to fight back into the count. He’s as good as there is in the league.”

Back in 2008, the Cardinals scored nine runs against Cain spread out over 3 2-3 innings.

Adams finished with three hits, including a two-run double in the fourth.

”I can’t get over the two-strike, two-out hits we were putting together,” Cardinals’ manager Mike Matheny said. ”If you’re looking for a kind of offense, that’s what we can be. It was a nice run there.”

The Giants gave up their most runs in an inning since 2004 when Cincinnati scored 10 in the eighth.

The Cardinals’ team record is 12 in an inning, accomplished last July.

Carpenter added an RBI double in the eighth. Allen Craig, Pete Kozma and John Jay also drove in two runs apiece.

Brandon Belt singled with two outs in the Giants’ ninth to end an 0-for-12 streak and Nick Noonan followed with a single for his first major league hit.

— Associated Press —

Kansas’ Withey named NABC Co-Defensive Player of the Year

KUKansas senior center has been named the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) Co-Defensive Player of the Year, announced on Sunday, April 7, at the 2013 AT&T/NABC Guardians of the Game Awards Show in Atlanta. He shares the honor with Indiana junior guard Victor Oladipo.

The Most Outstanding Player of the 2013 Big 12 Championship, Withey led Kansas in rebounding at 8.5 boards per game to complement his 13.7 scoring average. The 7-foot San Diego native broke his own Kansas and Big 12 single-season record blocked shots record with 146 blocks in 2012-13. Last season Withey blocked 140 shots to set the school and league mark.

The 2012 and 2013 Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year, Withey is also the KU and Big 12 career blocked shots leader ending his career with 312 all-time blocks. A three-time Big 12 Player of the Week this season, Withey led the Big 12 with 3.95 blocked shots per game, which ranks second nationally, and set the KU and conference per game average season record. Last week Withey was named Consensus All-America Second Team along with KU redshirt freshman guard Ben McLemore.

— KU Sports Information —

Griffons blast 10 home runs in doubleheader sweep at Pitt State

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western baseball team hit 10 home runs in a doubleheader sweep over the Pittsburg State Gorillas on Saturday afternoon. The Griffons won both games 12-5 improving to 27-5 overall and 21-1 in MIAA action.

Game 1
MWSU 12, PSU 5

The Griffons got another solid pitching performance from Brandon Simmons as he remains undefeated on the season. He went five innings giving up eight hits and two earned runs while striking out two. His two strikeouts puts him in 5th on the all-time list for the Griffons with 204. He is 7-0 on the season.

The Griffons got on the board in the second inning getting four runs on six hits. Grant Fink led off the inning with a double and scored on a Jimmy Smelcer single to center field. Michael Schulze got the Griffons first homer of the day while Kyle Simpson got an RBI single.

Things continued to go well for the Griffons in the third when they got five more hits and six more runs. Fink hit his 12th homer of the season leading off the inning while Bubba Dotson hit his 9th homer and third grand slam of the season. Nate Ramler hit the final homer in the inning giving MWSU the 10-0 lead after three.

In the fourth Jake Schrader hit a homer and Schulze hit his second of the game and fifth of the season giving MWSU the 12-0 lead.

The Gorillas scored five late runs but it would be to little to late in game one.

The Griffons has 18 hits with Jimmy Smelcer getting three hits while seven other Griffons had two hits.

The Gorialls had 12 hits with five players getting two hits. Jake Stevenson got the loss going 2.2 innnings giving up 12 hits and 10 earned runs. He falls to 2-3 with the loss.

Game 2
MWSU 12, PSU 5

In game two the Griffon bats continued to stay red hot pounding out 14 more hits and four more home runs. The Griffons opened up the scoring in the first hitting three straight doubles and then Spencer Shockley connecting with his second homer of the season giving MWSU the 4-0 lead.

In the second inning Shawn Egge hit his third homer of the season and Dotson connected on his 10th homer giving MWSU a 7-0 lead after two.

The Gorillas battled back scoring the next three runs cutting MWSU’s lead to 7-3 after four. The game stayed that way until the 7th when the Griffons put two more on the board. Shockley got two more RBI with a two run double giving the Griffons the 9-3 lead.

In the eighth Nate Ramler hit another home run putting MWSU up 12-3. That would be all they would need in the victory.

The Griffons were led by Dotson and Shockley as they both had three hits. Dotson scored four runs and had two RBI while Schockley had four RBI. Banks Born go the win going four innings giving up five hits and two earned runs. He improves to 4-0 with the victory.

Pittsburg State had 13 hits with Austin Lastimado getting three. They fall to 18-13 overall and 15-12 in MIAA play.

The two teams play the final game of the series on Sunday, April 7. Game time is set for 1:00 pm.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Bearcats score 31 in win against SBU after losing game one

riggertNorthwestThe Northwest Missouri State baseball team scored a combine 44 runs in two games but ended up splitting the double-header with Southwest Baptist losing game one 14-13 and winning game two 31-7.

Northwest scored first putting up two runs in the third inning. SBU took the lead with a three run fourth inning going up 3-2.

The Bearcats added six runs in the top of the fifth inning while SBU answered with four runs of their own in the bottom half.

Both team’s put up four runs in the sixth inning leaving Northwest up 12-11 heading to the final inning of game one.

Brandon Huske plated Ryan Abernathy to give the Bearcats an insurance run and putting them up 13-11. SBU was able to battle back and score three runs in the bottom of the eighth inning to take game one 14-13.

Marcus Garrett got the start for Northwest but got the no decision after pitching 4.2 innings. Tyler Barth was tagged with the loss.

Game two saw the Bearcat offense do things it had never done before in the history of the program.

Northwest scored in every inning except the seventh putting up five runs in the first, nine runs in the second, eight runs in the third and nine total runs in the fourth through the sixth innings.

Southwest Baptist put up seven runs of their own but could not keep up with the Bearcat offense.

Abernathy went 4 for 5 in the game with a double, a home run and five runs scored. Cam Bedard and Charlie Krueger combined to go 9 for 12 while hitting four home runs and bringing in nine RBIs.

Northwest broke the previous record of 28 runs scored in a game by plating 31 over seven innings. The offense hit nine doubles breaking the old record of seven set 24 years ago in 1989. The team also set a new mark in home runs hit in a game hitting seven long balls in the contest.

The Bearcats improve their record to 12-23, 10-20 on the season. Northwest will host William Jewell in a nine inning affair Wednesday with first pitch scheduled for 2:00 p.m.

— NWMSU Sports Information —

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