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Northwest’s Weis named NFCA Division II All-American

MARYVILLE, Mo. – Northwest Missouri State University softball sophomore Kaitlyn Weis earned 2018 NFCA Division II All-American First Team softball honors on Wednesday. Weis is the first Bearcat softball player to ever earn First Team All-American honors.

Weis was named to the All-MIAA, D2CCA All-Region and All-Central Region First Team as a second baseman this year. During the 2018 season, Weis led the team in almost every category. She batted .390, crossed the plate 39 times, knocked in 48 runs and recorded 57 hits. The second baseman started in all 46 games for the Bearcats this season and finished the regular season tied for first place in the record books for most home runs in a season with 15.

— Northwest Athletics —

Please stand: NFL owners approve new national anthem policy

ATLANTA (AP) — NFL owners have approved a new policy aimed at addressing the firestorm over national anthem protests, permitting players to stay in the locker room during the “The Star-Spangled Banner” but requiring them to stand if they come to the field.

The decision was announced Wednesday by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell during the league’s spring meeting in Atlanta.

In a sign that players were not part of the discussions, any violations of the policy would result in fines against the team — not the players. The NFL Players Association said it will challenge any part of the new policy that violates the collective bargaining agreement.

The owners spent several hours addressing the contentious issue — which has reached all the way to the White House.

Former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick began kneeling during the national anthem in 2016, a quiet but powerful protest against police brutality and racial inequities in the justice system.

Other players took up the cause.

Royals even series at St. Louis as Hammel earns first win

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Alex Gordon and Salvador Perez each homered and Jason Hammel earned his first victory of the season as the Kansas City Royals beat the St. Louis Cardinals 5-1 on Tuesday night.

Hammel (1-5) has been winless in his previous 13 starts dating back to his last win Sept. 6, 2017. Hammel also had been winless in his previous seven road starts.

He went seven innings, giving up nine hits and a run to help the Royals win for the second time in 10 games. He struck out six and hit a batter with no walks.

Luke Weaver (3-4) pitched seven innings in his first career outing against Kansas City. He allowed seven hits and struck out eight against one walk.

Gordon added two singles in a 3-for-4 night after entering the game hitless in his previous 14 at-bats. He was in a 4-for-40 skid that dated back to May 9.

Kansas City is 1/3 in interleague play this season. The Royals had lost their last five games against St. Louis and are 4-10 against their cross-state rivals in interleague play dating back to May 24, 2015.

Besides hitting the home run, Perez threw out two baserunners.

Kansas City went ahead 2-1 in the fourth on a two-out double by Alcides Escobar, who snapped an 0-for-9 skid with a single in the second inning. Whit Merrifield walked with one out and went to third on a single to right by Gordon. Escobar, who went 3-for-4, lined a 3-2 off-speed pitch to left to drive home Merrifield.

A leadoff homer by Perez in the sixth gave the Royals a 3-1 edge.

Kansas City added two runs in the ninth of reliever Greg Holland, a former Royal, who did not get any of the four batters he faced out.

St. Louis took a 1-0 lead in the first on a double steal. With two outs, Jose Martinez singled and went to third on Marcell Ozuna’s single. Ozuna took off for second and Perez faked a throw to second. Martinez started home but stopped. Perez threw to third baseman Mike Moustakas, who dropped the throw, allowing Martinez to score.

Gordon homered with one out in the second to tie the game.

LINEUP CHANGES

Tommy Pham, who has been the Cardinals’ best player this year, did not start Tuesday. He is 0-for-8 with six strikeouts in the last two games. His average has dropped 40 points in the last 10 days to .303. Rookie Tyler O’Neill started in center. Dexter Fowler, who did not play Monday, led off and played in right. He went 0-for-4.

IRONMAN

With his start, Escobar had made 381 consecutive starts. It is the longest streak in Royals history and the longest active streak in the major leagues.

TRAINING ROOM

Royals: 1B Lucas Duda (right foot plantar fasciitis) is eligible to come off the 10-day disabled list Thursday. Duda is batting .256 with four home runs and 19 RBI in 37 games this season.

Cardinals: C Yadier Molina continues to recover from a traumatic hematoma sustained when he was hit by a foul ball earlier this month. “He’s seeing the doctor on Thursday,” said St. Louis General Manager Michael Girsch said of Molina. “That’s how fast we will get some guidance on when he can start doing physical activity. He’s been on significant rest so it’s hard to project until he can start jogging and stuff like that.” … Greg Garcia, 28, who left Monday’s game in the sixth inning with lower back tightness was not in the lineup Tuesday. He is listed as day to day. Garcia is hitting .241 with two home runs and nine RBI in 36 games as the Cardinals’ utility man.

UP NEXT

Royals: RHP Jakob Junis (5-3, 3.51) will be facing the Cardinals for the first time in his career. He’s 2-0 with a 2.95 ERA in three starts against National League teams, all coming in 2017. He has allowed two or fewer runs and worked at least six innings in three of his road starts this season.

Cardinals: RHP Michael Wacha (5-1, 3.08) has limited opponents to two runs or less in each of his last six starts (2.06 ERA). He won his 50th career game in his last start making him the 11th-youngest pitcher to reach that milestone since 1900.

— Associated Press —

Griffons’ Patrick McCarthy named to All-Central Region team

ST. JOSEPH – Missouri Western men’s golfer Patrick McCarthy was named to the NCAA Division II PING All-Central Region Team as announced by the Golf Coaches Association of America.

McCarthy finished his sophomore season by leading the men’s golf team to its first regional appearance in more than 10 years. The Albuquerque, New Mexico native was named first team All-MIAA and was the team’s nominee for the St. Joseph News-Press Missouri Western Men’s Student-Athlete of the Year. McCarthy averaged just over 1-over par on the season, a 72.63 per round average, and claimed three individual titles while finishing in the top-five four times. He recorded three sub-70 rounds, including two 5-under, 67s that were the lowest scores turned in by a Griffon this season.

PING ALL-CENTRAL REGION TEAM
Eli Armstrong, Central Oklahoma
Shayne Allan, Central Missouri
Mason Banger, Harding
John Bonaobra, Central Missouri
Luke Cornett, Arkansas Tech
Austin Gean, Arkansas Tech
Alexander Hughes, Central Oklahoma
Zach James, Southeastern Oklahoma State
Patrick McCarthy, Missouri Western State
Sam Parrott, Central Missouri
Noah Rasinkiski, Concordia (MN)
Yente Van Doren, Lindenwood

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest Missouri State announces 2018 soccer schedule

MARYVILLE, Mo. – Northwest Missouri State University head soccer coach Marc Gordon has announced the Bearcats’ 2018 schedule. The slate includes 17 games with nine taking place in Maryville, Mo. Northwest will open the season at home against William Jewell on Thursday, Aug. 30, at 3 p.m.

This year’s home schedule includes non-conference games against William Jewell (Aug. 30), Truman State (Sept. 7), Missouri Western (Sept. 16) and Lindenwood (Sept. 21). The MIAA home slate includes Central Missouri (Sept. 23), Washburn (Sept. 28), Emporia State (Sept. 30), Central Oklahoma (Oct. 19) and Northeastern State (Oct. 21).

The road schedule includes non-conference games against Rockhurst (Sept. 2) and Central Missouri (Sept. 14). The MIAA away slate includes Nebraska Kearney (Oct. 5), Fort Hays State (Oct. 7), Missouri Southern (Oct. 12), Southwest Baptist (Oct. 14), Northeastern State (Oct. 13), Missouri Western (Oct. 26) and Lindenwood (Oct. 28).

— Northwest Athletics —

Royals get blanked by Cardinals in series opener 6-0

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Miles Mikolas pitched a four-hitter for his first career shutout and Tyler O’Neill homered for the third straight game and drove in four runs, leading the St. Louis Cardinals to a 6-0 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Monday night.

Mikolas needed just 109 pitches to remain unbeaten and struck out a career-high nine. The Cardinals won for the third time in four games and beat the Royals for the fifth straight time.

Mikolas (6-0) retired 13 of the final 14 batters he faced. The only trouble he faced came after he allowed back-to-back singles to start the third, but got out of it with the help of a double play.

O’Neill’s three-run homer, his first career to the opposite field, capped a four-run third in which the Cardinals strung together five two-out hits. O’Neill’s double in the fifth scored Marcell Ozuna, giving the Cardinals a 5-0 lead.

Ozuna proceeded O’Neill’s blast with an RBI single, breaking a 0-for-22 slump. Ozuna reached three times and had a pair of hits.

Matt Carpenter homered in the seventh as part of a three-hit night. Carpenter is hitting .542 (13 for 24) in his last six games, including seven doubles, to raise his average to .210. It is the first time since April 7 that Carpenter’s average rose north of .200.

Royals starter Ian Kennedy (1-5) gave up five runs, all with two outs, in 5 2/3 innings. He has lost his last five decisions and hasn’t gotten a win since April 7.

The Royals have lost eight of their last nine.

TRAINING ROOM

Royals: RHP Justin Grimm (lower back stiffness) is on a rehab assignment at Triple-A Omaha.

Cardinals: SS Greg Garcia left the game in the sixth with lower back tightness and RHP Carlos Martinez (right lat strain) threw long toss for the first time.

UP NEXT

Cardinals RHP Luke Weaver (3-3, 4.37 ERA) will look to build on his strongest outing of the season when he takes the mound against the Royals and Jason Hammel (0-5, 6.28 ERA) in the second game of the three-game series. Weaver allowed one run in a season-high seven innings in a 6-2 loss to Philadelphia on Thursday. Hammel, winless in his last 13 starts, is seeking his first victory since Sept. 6, 2017.

— Associated Press —

KU Chancellor fires Athletic Director Sheahon Zenger

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas has fired the Athletic Director.

Zenger-Photo University of Kansas

In an email to the campus Monday, Chancellor Douglas A. Girod wrote, “This morning I met with Director of Athletics Sheahon Zenger and informed him that I am relieving him of his duties, effective immediately.

Sheahon has been a loyal Jayhawk, and our athletics department has improved in many areas under his leadership. But Athletics continues to face a number of challenges, and progress in key areas has been elusive. To achieve the level of success we need and expect, I have determined a change in leadership is necessary.

Sean Lester, our deputy athletics director, will serve as interim director. I have spoken with Sean about my expectations for the coming months, and I am confident he will provide sound leadership and stability during this transition.

I have begun the process of identifying a permanent athletics director. To lead this process, I have enlisted Drue Jennings, one of our most respected and accomplished alumni. Many of you know Drue as our interim athletics director in 2003 and for his role in leading the search processes that brought Chancellor Gray-Little and Coach Self to KU. Jed Hughes, a consultant with the Korn Ferry executive search firm, will assist Drue.

In addition, earlier today I spoke with Coach Beaty and shared my expectation that he will continue recruiting hard and getting his team ready for the season.

Since becoming chancellor, I have spent countless hours with higher education peers and Jayhawks to hear their perspective on KU. A common thread in these conversations is that, as a major public university with national aspirations, we must continue to strive for excellence in all areas — including athletics. As I have said many times, a successful athletics department is inextricably linked to our broader mission as a flagship research university.

The other common thread in these conversations is optimism for Kansas Athletics. Across the country, we are recognized as having elite programs, a proud tradition, and a loyal fan base. These assets will serve us well as we identify a new leader for Kansas Athletics.

I want to thank Sheahon for his service during the past seven years. Under his leadership, student-athlete GPAs reached an all-time high. Rock Chalk Park, McCarthy Hall, and the DeBruce Center are lasting tributes to his efforts. Most importantly, he prioritized our student-athletes and represented KU with integrity and class.”

Royals get routed by Yankees 10-1 in series finale

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The New York Yankees rightfully lamented a miserable week filled with rainouts, broken planes and a patchwork schedule that forced right-hander Sonny Gray to pitch on eight days’ rest.

Well, that last bit turned out to be a good thing.

Gray discovered a couple of tweaks in his delivery during his extended time off, and he transferred it to the mound on Sunday, going eight innings and helping the Yankees beat the Kansas City Royals 10-1 to win an eighth consecutive series for the first time in 20 years.

“I’m pretty quick to the plate a lot of times. I just had to stay on top of the rubber and deliver a good pitch,” said Gray, who also credited catcher Austin Romine for helping him stay in rhythm.

“It was pitch, mound, sign, go,” Romine explained.

Sure sounds simple. It works pretty well, too, when you’re getting big production from the Yankees’ powerful lineup. Tyler Austin hit a pair of two-run homers, and Miguel Andujar and Romine went back-to-back in the ninth to New York win for the 14th time in 15 games against the AL Central.

Kansas City remains winless in six rubber games this season.

Gray (3-3) was coming off a tough start against Oakland in which he allowed five runs and a season-high nine hits in five innings. But there was nothing tough about facing the Royals’ popgun lineup, which didn’t manage its first hit until there were two down in the fifth.

Gray wound up allowing one run while striking out five and walking one.

Eric Skoglund (1-4) gave up six runs, eight hits and two walks in five innings in the latest lousy start by the Royals’ rotation. Kansas City’s 5.51 team ERA is by far the worst in the majors.

“I see really bright spots in a game like today and then I see where the lights go out,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “He was moving the ball around very effectively, a good curveball and pitching aggressively and kind of struggled to do that in the fourth and the fifth.”

One night after the Yankees pounded five homers, including two from Gary Sanchez, it was the strong but inconsistent Austin that gave New York the lead and kept adding to it.

Skoglund had managed to avoid early trouble, nearly getting a triple play in the second inning, but walked Aaron Hicks to start the fourth. Austin turned on the first pitch he saw and sent it about 440 feet over the left-field wall — it actually went about 500 feet with the bounce.

New York tacked on two more runs, the first on Romine’s single later in the inning and the other on Hicks’ triple in the fifth, before Austin got into the act again.

This time, his two-run shot was a high fly ball that just cleared the centerfield wall.

It was the second two-homer game of the year for Austin, who also did it March 31 at Toronto. The four RBI matched a career high, which he also accomplished April 23 against Minnesota.

That was plenty for Gray, who finally surrendered a run with two outs in the eighth. He retired his first 14 batters and only allowed two runners to reach second through the first seven innings.

“Success is a beautiful thing, especially when you’ve had some ups and downs,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “Adversity is not a bad thing, especially when you’re Sonny Gray and you have the equipment to get out of it.”

SWEET LOU

The Royals wrapped their Legends Weekend celebration with Lou Piniella throwing out the ceremonial first pitch. Piniella has deep ties to both clubs, having played five seasons in Kansas City and his final 11 with New York. He also spent three seasons as the Yankees’ manager.

UP AND DOWN

Clint Frazier’s return to the major leagues was brief. He made his season debut Saturday, going 1 for 2 with a double and two walks. He did not play Sunday, then was optioned to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH

New York’s starting lineup Saturday was its first with every player under 29 since Sept. 26, 1970, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. “It’s been all year that we’ve gotten good production up and down the lineup,” Boone said. “We’ve had some young players step up and kind of come to age.”

HELLO, OLD FRIEND

Kansas City assigned RHP Michael Mariot to Double-A Northwest Arkansas. The eighth-round pick of the Royals in 2010 was signed Friday after getting released by San Diego earlier in the week.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Yankees: 1B Greg Bird (right ankle surgery) could be ready to rejoin the Yankees this week, though that could mean deciding between him and Austin for a roster spot. “The good thing,” Boone said, “is a lot of people have put themselves in a position to make it difficult.”

Royals: LHP Danny Duffy said he’s perfectly healthy despite another miserable outing Saturday, and even floated the idea of moving to the bullpen. Yost nixed that on Sunday. “That’s not happening. He’s a major league starter,” Yost said, “and yes, he’s going to make his next start.”

UP NEXT

The Yankees head to Texas for a three-game set beginning Monday night, when RHP Masahiro Tanaka (4-2, 4.73 ERA) will be on the mound. The Royals head across Missouri for three games with St. Louis with RHP Ian Kennedy (1-4, 4.98 ERA) starting the opener Monday night.

— Associated Press —

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