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Chiefs trade draft picks to Seattle for DE Frank Clark

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs acquired pass rusher Frank Clark from the Seattle Seahawks for a package of picks Tuesday, then quickly agreed with him on a $105 million, five-year contract, as they continue to overhaul their much-maligned defense.

The Chiefs sent the No. 29 overall pick in this year’s draft and a second-round pick in 2020 to Seattle, a person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated Press. The person spoke about the trade terms and contract details on condition of anonymity because they were pending a physical.

Clark planned to head to Kansas City to complete that in the next 48 hours.

The trade, first reported by the NFL Network, also includes a swap of third-round picks in this year’s draft. That means the Chiefs will move up eight spots on Friday night.

Chiefs general manager Brett Veach said last week that he was aggressively trying to upgrade the defense, and he acknowledge the window for winning a Super Bowl title began last season. That’s when Patrick Mahomes took over at quarterback and had an MVP season as a first-time starter, leading Kansas City to a third straight AFC West title and the conference championship game.

“We want to take the next step,” Veach said. “Certainly, it goes without saying our offense was pretty efficient last year and I think we are always looking to improve and get better.”

Seattle already had the 21st pick overall pick Thursday night, and now general manager John Schneider has an additional first-day selection as he begins rebuilding his own defense.

Clark was chosen by the Seahawks in the second round of the 2015 draft, though most agreed he was a first-round talent docked by off-the-field concerns. But he quickly became a dependable edge rusher, piling up 36 sacks over his first four seasons with a team-best 14 this past season.

The Seahawks placed the franchise tag on him after the season, but Clark had yet to sign the $17.128 million deal as rumors of a trade swirled. Several other teams also inquired about landing him ahead of the draft as Seattle tried to accumulate additional picks.

“This time, and the trade deadline, there’s some speculation about a lot of players,” Schneider said on Monday. “We’re involved in a lot of deals. We take a lot of pride in that. We wouldn’t be doing our jobs if we weren’t listening to everybody.”

Kansas City ultimately won the bidding for him.

Veach has spent most of the offseason rebuilding one of the league’s worst defenses, one that played a key role in their AFC title game collapse. They lost in overtime to New England when the Patriots won the coin toss, marched downfield and scored the winning touchdown in a 37-31 victory — never giving Mahomes and one of the NFL’s most potent offenses a chance with the ball.

In a matter of days, the Chiefs fired defensive coordinator Bob Sutton, hired new coordinator Steve Spagnuolo and began sifting through their personnel as they switched from a 3-4 to a 4-3 system.

They got rid of longtime safety Eric Berry and high-priced linebackers Justin Houston and Dee Ford, sending the latter to San Francisco for a second-round pick next year, and carved out enough cap space to find replacements. They signed safety Tyrann Mathieu, cornerback Bashaud Breeland, linebacker Damien Wilson and defensive end Alex Okafor in free agency, then traded safety Eric Murray to former GM John Dorsey and the Cleveland Browns for defensive end Emmanuel Ogbah.

All told, the Chiefs have signed or traded for five new defensive starters.

“We didn’t win the Super Bowl,” Veach said, “so we can get better. I think all across the board, there is talent that we can acquire, and we can get more depth on both sides of the football. I think that’s what makes it fun and exciting. There’s certainly some specific areas that may be more apparent. But I think the things you do in free agency protect yourself in the draft, so you don’t have to take a player that you feel is a second- or third-round value in the first round.”

The Seahawks have also been busy retooling their defense this offseason, adding defensive ends Cassius Marsh and Nate Orchard as they shopped Clark. They are expected to continue to target help in the pass rush and the defensive backfield in the first couple of rounds of the draft.

The additional first-round pick Thursday night also gives Seattle some flexibility.

Schneider has a tendency to move around in drafts, and it’s possible the Seahawks could trade down and acquire additional picks. They still only have five selections overall, and in nine previous drafts in charge, Schneider has never made fewer than eight selections.

— Associated Press —

Griffon baseball adds non-conference game against Emporia State Wednesday

ST. JOSEPH – Griffon Baseball has added a non-conference game against Emporia State to its home schedule this week.

Missouri Western will host the Hornets in a single non-conference game, Wednesday, April 24 at 4 p.m.

Mother Nature wreaked havoc on the Griffons’ early season schedule, particularly at the Spring Sports Complex. So far, MWSU has played just nine of its 35 games at the Spring Sports Complex and the Griffons played as the guest in one third of those.

To help compensate for the cancellation of seven home games and a change in venue of six other home games, Missouri Western has now added three non-conference games to the final two weeks of the regular season. In addition to Wednesday’s game with Emporia State, the Griffons will host Illinois-Springfield in a doubleheader on Tuesday, April 30.

Missouri Western is 18-17 overall and 15-12 in MIAA play. Emporia State (24-16, 17-10) took two out of three from MWSU in the teams’ MIAA series in Emporia, Kansas earlier this month. With two conference series remaining, the Griffons are in a three-way tie for fifth place in the MIAA standings with Pittsburg State and Lindenwood.

The Griffons are set to host Southwest Baptist in a three-game MIAA series beginning on Friday. MWSU is now scheduled to play its final nine regular season games at home.

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest’s Schultz earns weekly MIAA track & field honor

Northwest Missouri State senior track athlete Kevin Schultz was named the MIAA field athlete of the week.

Schultz jumped 7.25″ to automatically qualify for the NCAA Division II outdoor championship meet. Schultz’s jump is the second-highest in school history. It is the highest mark in the nation this year and the highest since 2016 in Division II. It is the highest in the MIAA since 2011 when the MIAA started using TFRRS.

Schultz won the MIAA Indoor Championship in the high jump earlier this year.

— Northwest Athletics —

MWSU in third after day one of MIAA Women’s Golf Championships; Ong tied for 4th

MAYETTA, Kan. – Missouri Western Women’s Golf sits in third place after the opening round of the MIAA Women’s Golf Championships at Firekeeper Golf Course Monday. Both Shi Qing Ong and Katie Irvin are positioned inside the top-10 to lead the Griffons after the first round.

The MIAA Women’s Golf Championships features three rounds spread across three-consecutive days. Missouri Western put together a solid team performance to open the tournament, finishing with a combined score of 313. The Griffons trail Central Missouri by nine strokes for second place. Northeastern State is the current leader after scoring a 300 on Monday.

Near the top of the individual leaderboard was Shi Qing Ong in a tie for fourth. The 2018-19 MIAA Women’s Golfer of the Year finished the first 18 holes of the tournament with a 74 (+2). Ong led the field of 49 golfers with five birdies in the round. She is currently three strokes back of Central Missouri’s Rosie Klausner for the top spot heading into the second round.

Katie Irvin played one of the best single rounds of her season, finishing Monday with a score of 78 (+6) to land inside the top-10 in a tie for ninth. Her consistent first round included two birdies and 10 pars. She also had one of the top scores on par-four scoring, going two-over on those holes.

Anna Bech is currently in a tie for 16th after her 80 (+8) in the first round. Bech was second on the team with three birdies.

Chong Yong and Jenna Kosmatka are both tied for 20th after first-round scores of 81 (+9). Kosmatka led the team with 11 pars on Monday.

— MWSU Athletics —

Royals drop series opener at Tampa Bay 6-3

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Mike Zunino’s first home run for the Tampa Bay Rays was one to remember.

The veteran catcher was reinstated from the paternity list, three days after the birth of his first child, and hit a two-run shot that helped the AL East leaders stop a season-high four-game skid with a 6-3 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Monday night.

“Man, I didn’t promise that, but I’ll definitely take it,” Zunino said. “You know, that was a very special moment in life and my baseball career. It’s something I’ll never forget.”

Yandy Diaz, Brandon Lowe and Daniel Robertson also drove in runs for the Rays, who scored three times in the seventh to come from behind against Brad Keller (2-2).

It’s the ninth time this season the Royals, who have the AL’s worst record, have lost after holding a lead in the sixth inning or later.

“That’s a pesky offensive outfit over there. They give you good at-bats,” Kansas City manager Ned Yost said. “But going into the seventh, we had the lead. We just couldn’t hold it.”

Pitching while appealing a five-game suspension for his role in a benches-clearing fracas with the Chicago White Sox last week, Keller held the Rays in check until giving up Robertson’s tying RBI grounder and Zunino’s homer to straight away center in the seventh.

Zunino, obtained from Seattle in an offseason trade, missed three games while on the paternity list for the birth of his son, Rhett Michael, last Friday.

“That’s got to be pretty special. I’m a big fan of Rhett Zunino right now. That’s something he’s going to be able to talk about for a long time. Awesome,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “The way it came, and how big a hit it was at the time is even more impactful.”

The Rays, coming off being swept by the defending World Series champion Boston Red Sox over the weekend, are 4-5 over their last nine games following an 11-3 start.

“We had a tough weekend and things were not looking good up until the sixth,” Cash said. “The guys really did a good job of just grinding out at-bats. We smoked some balls early on but had absolutely nothing to show for it, and that can be pretty demoralizing. … But they kept at it and keep putting pressure on, and finally something broke.”

Keller allowed five runs and seven hits over 6 1/3 innings in his first outing since hitting Chicago’s Tim Anderson with a pitch two innings after the AL’s leading hitter emphatically spiked his bat to celebrate a homer, sparking last Wednesday’s melee that led to his suspension.

“I felt really good for the first six and I felt good going out for the seventh,” Keller said, adding that ultimately he left too many pitches over the middle of the plate.

Alex Gordon, Hunter Dozier and Jorge Soler hit solo homers for the Royals, who have lost four straight.

Gordon and Dozier went deep for the second straight game, with Gordon connecting off Rays starter Yonny Chirinos in the first inning and Dozier giving the Royals a 3-1 lead in the sixth. Soler’s solo shot snapped a fifth-inning tie.

Wilmer Font (1-0) struck out the only batter he faced to get the win. Emilio Pagan pitched a perfect ninth for his first career save.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Dozier, who started at designated hitter, was removed from the game in the eighth inning because of right lower back spasms and soreness and is day to day. … LHP Danny Duffy (left shoulder impingement syndrome) is expected to rejoin the rotation Friday night. “He’s been one of our better starters over the last couple years, and when he’s healthy we know what type of pitcher he is,” Yost said.

Rays: RF Austin Meadows, who’s on the injured list with a sprained right thumb, will be shut down for 10 days and hopes he will be ready to return in three to four weeks. “Let the swelling go down and after that see where we’re at,” Meadows said.

ON THE MEND

Rays LHP Blake Snell (fractured right fourth toe) had a light mound session totaling eight pitches in advance of an upcoming full bullpen. The 2018 AL Cy Young Award winner did not take part in defensive drills with the other pitchers. Snell was hurt moving a decorative stand in the bathroom of his home on April 14.

UP NEXT

Royals RHP Homer Bailey (2-1, 4.30 ERA) will start the middle date of a three-game series. Opener Ryne Stanek (0-0, 1.46) will take the mound first for the Rays.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals crush Milwaukee Monday 13-5

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Dexter Fowler had his first four-hit game in six years, hitting his first home run this season and driving in four runs to lead the St. Louis Cardinals over the Milwaukee Brewers 13-5 on Monday night.

Paul Goldschmidt hit his ninth home run and had three hits and three RBI for the Cardinals. St. Louis outhit Milwaukee 18-5, set a season high for runs and won its third straight.

Fowler had the fifth four-hit game of his career, his first since June 9, 2013, against San Diego.

Ryan Braun, Hernan Perez, Yasmani Grandal and Travis Shaw homered for Milwaukee, which has lost five of six.

Jack Flaherty (2-1) allowed four runs and three hits — all homers — in six innings. He struck out 10, reaching double digits for the fourth time in his big league career.

Adrian Houser (0-1) lost in his season debut and first big league start. He gave up five runs and nine hits in four-plus innings.

Kolten Wong hit an RBI single in the second, and Fowler made it 3-0 in the third with his first home run since July 24, a two-run drive.

Braun’s solo homer and Perez’s two-run home run tied the score in the fifth, but Goldschmidt put the Cardinals ahead to stay with a two-run homer in the bottom half that chased Houser.

Grandal homered in the sixth, but St. Louis blew open the game with a seven-run seventh off Jacob Barnes and Aaron Wilkerson that included a two-run, pinch-hit single by rookie Lane Thomas.

LONG BALL

Milwaukee has 47 home runs this season while St. Louis has 35. The Brewers have hit 21 and the Cardinals 17 in their eight games against each other.

ROSTER MOVES

Brewers: LHP Donnie Hart was optioned Triple-A San Antonio, Hauser and RHP Jake Petricka were recalled from San Antonio. … Brewers: RHP Junior Guerra was placed on the bereavement list. He went home to Venezuela to be with his ill father and the Brewers expect he will rejoin the team for a weekend series at the New York Mets.

Cardinals: INF/OF Drew Robinson was recalled from Triple-A Memphis.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: RHP Michael Wacha was placed on 10-day IL with patellar tendinitis in his left knee.

UP NEXT

RHP Zach Davies (2-0) enters his start for Milwaukee on Tuesday with a 2-2 record against the Cardinals, including 0-2 with a 9.28 ERA in two starts last season. RHP Daniel Ponce de Leon will start in place of Wacha after going 2-0 with a 3.24 ERA in three starts at Triple-A Memphis. He had one appearance in 2018 against Milwaukee, pitching one of scoreless relief.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western’s Shi Qing Ong named MIAA Golfer of the Year

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The MIAA released the 2018-19 All-MIAA Women’s Golf Awards on Sunday afternoon, naming Shi Qing Ong the MIAA Women’s Golfer of the Year. Ong and Chong Yong were also tabbed to the All-MIAA teams.

Ong receives her second-consecutive MIAA Golfer of the Year Award after a remarkable senior season. Her spring season included a historic stretch of four-consecutive event wins, claiming the top spot at the Warrior Invitational, Holiday Inn Express Classic, Jennies Golf Invitational, and HSU Spring Invite. Competitors were unable to keep up with Ong during the streak, as she won three of those events by a convincing five or more strokes.

Ong’s final season at Missouri Western also included three-straight MIAA Women’s Golfer of the Week awards. She even took second place in two of the four tournaments in which she did not win. With an average round score of 74, Ong’s single-round scores were as low as 67 (career-low), 69, and 70. She wraps up her historic four-year career with 13 wins in 43 appearances and was named First Team All-MIAA in each of her seasons at Missouri Western.

Chong Yong received Second Team All-MIAA honors after her junior season. Yong notched three top-10 finishes, including tying for fourth place at the Warrior Invitational in Las Vegas to open up the spring season. Yong still placed inside the top-25 in three of her other eight tournament appearances.

She finished the regular season with an average round score of below 79. Her season-low round came at the Griffons’ last event when she scored a 73 at the Central Region Preview on her way to finish in a tie for ninth place.

Yong has now been named All-MIAA in each of her three seasons at Missouri Western.

Missouri Western takes part in the MIAA Women’s Golf Championships April 23-25 at Firekeeper Golf Course in Mayetta, Kansas.

2018-19 All-MIAA Women’s Golf Awards and Teams 
Player of the Year:
 Shi Qing Ong – Missouri Western
Freshman of the Year: Rosie Klauser – Central Missouri
Coach of the Year: Chris Port – Central Missouri

First-Team All-MIAA
Olivia Sobaski – Central Missouri
Sydney Roberts – Central Oklahoma
Hannah Perkins – Fort Hays State
Shi Qing Ong – Missouri Western
Ebba Moberg – Northeastern State
Aitana Hernandez – Northeastern State
Reflects Tie In Voting

Second-Team All-MIAA
Rosie Klausner – Central Missouri
Madison O’Dell – Central Oklahoma
Josefina Haupt – Lindenwood
Chong Yong – Missouri Western
Nia Station – Nebraska Kearney
Lexi Armon – Northeastern State
Reflects Tie In Voting

All-MIAA Honorable Mention
Central Oklahoma – Makena Mucciaccio, Faith Stewart
Lindenwood – Natalie Long, Dakota Limkemann
Nebraska Kearney – Danielle Dickerson
Northeastern State – Kelsey Lumpkin
Northwest Missouri – Morgan Thiele

— MWSU Athletics —

Royals lose to Yankees in 10 innings 7-6

NEW YORK (AP) — Austin Romine and Clint Frazier, backups carrying the burden while most of the Bronx Bombers are out for repair, kept the Yankees from a devastating loss and boosted the injury-decimated team back to a winning record.

On a day that began when Aaron Judge became the 13th New York player on the injured list, New York cruised to a five-run lead over Kansas City behind six more scoreless innings from James Paxton and Frazier’s sixth homer.

After the Royals surged ahead in a six-run eighth inning , Romine tied the score in the bottom half and followed with his third RBI single in the 10th for a 7-6 victory Sunday that got the Yankees back over .500 for the first time in two weeks.

“Get comfortable being uncomfortable,” manager Aaron Boone. “A lot of good things happened for us to snatch that game back.”

Aroldis Chapman, flashing 100 mph heat for only the second time this season, escaped a ninth-inning jam, and Zack Britton got out of trouble in the 10th. New York improved to 11-10, its first time over .500 since it was 5-4.

“There’s a couple guys that are irreplaceable here, but we’ve got to find a way to do it,” Romine said. “We’re still winning games. We’ve got guys stepping up left and right.”

DJ LeMahieu scored on a first-inning passed ball, and Romine hit an RBI single in the second after Mike Ford doubled for his first big league hit . Frazier, a big league cleanup batter for the first time, hit a three-run homer in the fifth, a 429-foot drive off Jorge Lopez that went over the left-field bullpen and gave him a team-high 17 RBI.

Coming off eight shutout innings of two-hit ball over Boston, Paxton allowed three hits and induced 18 swings and misses plus a pair of foul tips for strike three. He fanned 12 and walked one for the second straight game, becoming New York’s second pitcher with 12 or more strikeouts in back-to-back starts after David Cone in June 1998.

He left after allowing Alex Gordon’s double leading of the seventh and walking Hunter Dozier, but Tommy Kahnle got three straight outs. Kansas City loaded the bases against Chad Green, and Adam Ottavino — the first No. 0 in Yankees history — came in and laid some Easter eggs: Adalberto Mondesi hit a two-run double , Gordon drove a cutter to right for three-run homer and Dozier sent the next pitch, another cutter, off the back of the right-field bullpen .

“There’s no quit in us,” Dozier said.

And little relief pitching on a team that wasted leads in 12 of 15 losses.

Mike Tauchman doubled off Wily Peralta leading off the bottom half and tied the score at 6 on Romine’s two-out single.

Chapman allowed a leadoff single in the ninth to Billy Hamilton, who stole second and third but was stranded when Mondesi struck out and Gordon flied out .

Britton (1-0) gave up a leadoff single to Dozier in the 10th and picked off speedy pinch runner Terrance Gore.

“It’s just me messing up basically,” Gore said.

Britton turned his right ankle as he applied the tag at first to end the rundown. Britton’s mind flashed back to his Achilles tendon surgery in December 2017.

“Any time something’s down there, it brings back some memories,” Britton said.

He took a practice pitch and handed the ball to plate umpire Ron Kulpa.

“Maybe I’m not as athletic as I was pre-surgery,” Britton told him, smiling

Britton then threw called third strikes past Jorge Soler and Chris Owings, giving Kansas City 20 strikeouts, two more than the previous team record. The Royals whiffed 53 times in the series, nine more than their previous mark.

“We’re definitely swinging at pitches that aren’t strikes,” manager Ned Yost said. “Big strike zone here in New York for some reason.”

Jake Diekman (0-1) walked Tauchman and Gio Urshela leading off the bottom of the 10th, and 23-year-old Thairo Estrada made his big league debut as a pinch hitter and sacrificed against Ian Kennedy. Estrada, his career slowed when shot in the right thigh in his native Venezuela in January 2018, laid down a perfect soft bunt to first off the end of his bat with the infield in.

Romine took a ball and lofted a knuckle-curve over Hamilton, a no-doubt fly that landed on the center-field warning track, 361 feet from the plate, for his first career walk-off hit.

“We’re fighting through,” said Frazier, who had snapped his bat over a knee in frustration when he struck out in the ninth. “Hopefully it rubs off on everybody.”

STREAKING

Tauchman was first player whose first six hits with the Yankees all were for extra bases since Dave Kingman in 1977. The streak ended in the third when he hit a grounder that nicked first base, changed direction and went off the right foot of Lucas Duda for a single.

SHORT-STAFFED

Kansas City went with 24 players, optioning right-hander Glenn Sparkman to Triple-A Omaha after he allowed three runs and six hits in three innings Saturday.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: LHP Danny Duffy (left shoulder impingement) allowed an unearned run and four hits over 5 1/3 innings with seven strikeouts and no walks for Northwest Arkansas against Springfield on Saturday night. He could be activated for next weekend’s home series against the Los Angeles Angels.

Yankees: C Gary Sanchez, out since April 10 with a strained left calf, is scheduled to play a rehabilitation game Monday with Class A Charleston and could be activated Wednesday.

UP NEXT

Royals: RHP Brad Keller (2-1) starts Monday at Tampa Bay, his first appearance since hitting Tim Anderson of the Chicago White Sox with a pitch after Anderson homered. Keller appealed his five-game suspension.

Yankees: LHP J.A. Happ (0-2) starts at the Los Angeles Angels in the opener of a trip, facing RHP Matt Harvey (0-2).

— Associated Press —

Cardinals defeat Syndergaard, Mets 6-4 in series finale

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Noah Syndergaard has found his health, and even a little bit of luck at the plate, but he’s still off to a vexing start to the season.

Paul Goldschmidt drove in two runs and Syndergaard hit a home run with Dexter Fowler’s help, but he struggled on the mound as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the New York Mets 6-4 on Sunday.

“My frustration’s pretty high right now,” Syndergaard said. “It would have been a great win today, but I let the team down.”

Syndergaard (1-2) allowed six runs, four earned, on eight hits in five innings, but his most memorable play came while batting in the fourth. He hit a deep flyball to center that Fowler leaped for on the warning track even though it was well below the fence. The ball deflected off Fowler’s glove and over the wall for Syndergaard’s fifth career homer and first since Aug. 16, 2016, at Arizona.

It was one of four homers on the day for the Mets, but that wasn’t enough for Syndergaard, who has allowed at least five runs in his last two starts after not having given up five in a game since April 30, 2017, at Washington.

“He got mad at me when I took him out, which is great. It’s not like he’s shying away,” Mets manager Mickey Callaway said. “He wants to go out there and compete and guys have bad stretches. This is probably the worst stretch he’s had in his major league career when he’s been healthy, so he’ll bounce back from it.”

Dakota Hudson (1-1) allowed three runs on five hits in five innings, striking out five, for his first career victory as a starter. He went 4-1 in 26 appearances, all in relief, as a rookie last season.

“It’s big, getting my confidence going a little bit, getting everything kind of together,” Hudson said. “But now I can say, hey, I’m a starter, I’ve gotten a win as a starter and kind of gotten my feet under me a little bit.”

Jordan Hicks pitched a scoreless ninth for his fifth save in six chances. His last fastball measured 104.2 mph, the hardest in baseball this season. Hicks reached 105.1 mph last year, tied with Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman for the fastest pitch ever.

Robinson Cano homered for the Mets but left in the seventh after he was hit in the right hand by a pitch from Andrew Miller. Third base umpire Paul Emmel ruled that Cano swung before the ball hit his hand and called the pitch a strike.

“He started his swing,” Emmel told a pool reporter. “Pitch hit his hands, followed through with his swing, the ball actually went into fair territory. Bruce (Dreckman), the home-plate umpire, didn’t see the end of the swing so he called a hit batsman and was giving him first base. During the injury, then Bruce and I communicated which we’re supposed to do. So appeal on the check swing, so he went through with his swing.”

Callaway was ejected for arguing the call. The ejection was the third of his career. X-rays on Cano’s hand were negative.

“I was shocked, to be honest,” Callaway said about the call. “I was trying to figure out what we’re going to do the rest of the game, who’s going to pinch run for Robby, and they mosey on down and say that he swung.”

Pete Alonso and Michael Conforto also homered for New York, which lost two of three at St. Louis.

Kolten Wong’s RBI single in the second tied the game at 1-1, and he advanced to second after Brandon Nimmo’s throw to the plate wasn’t cut off. Hudson reached on an error to load the bases, and Goldschmidt singled two batters later to make it 3-1.

The Cardinals went ahead 5-1 on Molina’s RBI groundout and Fowler’s run-scoring double in the fourth.

“It’s a good offense,” Cardinals manager Mike Shildt said. “Syndergaard made some really tough pitches first inning, and we didn’t get sideways about it, kept the approach, had a great approach. Guys were really locked in and stayed to the middle of the field with a couple big two-out hits.”

SYRACUSE SHUTTLE

The Mets recalled LHP Daniel Zamora and optioned Saturday’s starter, RHP Chris Flexen, to Triple-A Syracuse. Zamora went 1-0 with a 3.00 ERA in 16 appearances last season.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Mets: INF Todd Frazier (left oblique strain) went 0 for 2 in a rehabilitation appearance at Syracuse and may be activated before Monday’s game against Philadelphia.

Cardinals: RHP Carlos Martinez (right shoulder cuff strain) will probably throw a side session Monday before heading to extended spring training, Shildt said.

UP NEXT

Mets: LHP Steven Matz (1-1, 4.96 ERA) starts against the Philadelphia Phillies on Monday as New York begins a 10-game homestand. Matz allowed eight runs without recording an out in his previous start, at Philadelphia on April 16.

Cardinals: RHP Jack Flaherty (1-1, 5.00) starts against the Milwaukee Brewers on Monday. Flaherty is 1-2 with a 4.58 ERA in seven career starts against Milwaukee.

— Associated Press —

Griffons lose game two at Pittsburg State 7-6

PITTSBURG, Kan. – Free passes led directly or indirectly to six Pittsburg State (22-18, 14-12) runs in a 7-6 loss for the Missouri Western baseball team (18-16, 15-11) on Friday.

Four of the Gorillas’ seven runs were earned and the home team’s first two runs both walked to get on base. The loss snapped a string of four-straight wins for Missouri Western.

NOTABLES

  • Andrew Curry put the Griffs up 2-0 with a two-run home run in the first inning
  • Two walks and a single that scored both runners tied the game for Pitt State in the home half of the first
  • The Griffs went up 4-2 in the third on a two-RBI single from Wyatt Meyer
  • A sacrifice fly in the fifth gave Pitt State its third run, but would have been the third out were it not for an error earlier in the inning
  • Another error and a passed ball aided a four-run eighth inning for Pittsburg State that gave the Gorillas their first lead and enough cushion to snap MWSU’s win streak
  • Missouri Western was charged with four errors in the game
  • Meyer had three hits and two RBIs
  • Curry had a pair of hits and two RBIs

UP NEXT

  • The rubber match in the series comes at noon on Saturday in Pittsburg.

— MWSU Athletics —

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