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MWSU soccer breaks eight records in 8-1 win over Ouachita Baptist

ST. JOSEPH – Seven team and individual records fell on the first night of the 2017 Griffon soccer season in an 8-1 trouncing of Ouachita Baptist.

Missouri Western completely dominated its opening game of the Stoney Creek MIAA-GAC Crossover with the most prolific offensive night in the program’s 13-year history. Freshman Taylor Schwartzkopf became the first Griffon to achieve a hat trick and the team’s eight goals eclipsed its previous high of six from the second game of the 2014 season. The Griffons out-shot Ouachita Baptist 41-7 on the night, including a 24-2 advantage in the first half.

RECORDS BROKEN
– Goals in a game (team) – 8
– Goals in a game (individual) – Taylor Schwartzkopf, 3
– Points in a game (team) – 21
– Points in a game (individual) – Schwartzkopf, 6
– Shots in a game (team) – 41
– Shots in a game (individual) – Cassidy Menke, 11
– Assists in a game (team) – 5
– Career Starts (goal keeper) – Sarah Lyle, 53

PHENOMENAL NIGHT FROM FRESHMEN
Schwartzkopf scored Missouri Western’s first two goals and took seven total shots, five on goal, but she wasn’t the only freshman to make an impact. Madison Utley also scored her first career goal and Chad Edwards was able to work 10 of his first-year Griffons into the game.

LYLE RETURNS
Sarah Lyle returned to the pitch after sitting out the 2016 season for personal reasons. Her start in goal made her MWSU’s all-time leader in that category to go along with some of her other career accolades. The senior’s services were only required for one half as she made one save on Ouachita Baptists’s only first half shot on goal. Freshman Ally Barb played the entire second half in goal, making two saves and allowing one goal.

UP NEXT
Missouri Western continues hosting duties of the crossover event with Harding at 2 p.m. on Sunday. Emporia State defeated Harding, 2-0 at Spratt Memorial Stadium Friday night.

— MWSU Athletics —

Moustakas, Moss homer; Royals hold off Twins 7-6

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — With Kansas City’s closer on the mound and a three-run lead, odds were pretty good that Scott Alexander could watch the final inning from the bullpen.

Instead, he got his second save of the year.

Alexander replaced an injured Kelvin Herrera and struck out Eddie Rosario with the bases loaded in the ninth inning as the Royals held off the Minnesota Twins 7-6 Friday night.

Mike Moustakas homered for the first time since mid-August, Brandon Moss also went deep for the Royals, who won for just the second time in eight games. Melky Cabrera tied a season-high with four hits.

Up 7-4, and with two outs, Herrera walked No. 9 hitter Zack Granite and hit Brian Dozier.

“That’s when I started thinking, `All right we better keep an eye on this,” said manger Ned Yost. “The velocity wasn’t dropping, but I got Scotty up just in case and it just started getting more and more and more wild.”

Herrera gave up a two-run single to Joe Mauer and fell behind 3-0 to Jorge Polanco — who ultimately walked — before being removed with low forearm tightness. Yost is unsure when Herrera will be available.

Alexander had a simple plan against Rosario.

“When you get the bases loaded and there’s no room to pitch around anybody you’ve just got to go after him,” Alexander said. “I knew what I wanted do to with him, just try to execute.”

He’s done it before.

Alexander got the final out Aug. 22 with the bases loaded after Herrera left with a similar injury.

“You never expect someone to get hurt in the middle of the inning like that or have to come out, so it happens real quick and you just try to gather yourself as much as you can and try to focus in on what you got to do,” he said.

Minnesota scored two runs in the ninth Thursday, the last on a hit-by-pitch with the bases loaded, to beat Chicago 5-4.

“We hung in there until the last round and made it interesting,” said Twins manager Paul Molitor. “Almost for the second day in a row to pull something out like that.”

The Twins remain one game behind New York — which lost 4-1 to Boston — for the top AL wild card spot. Minnesota entered the night leading Los Angeles, which played at Texas, by 1 1/2 games for the second spot. Kansas City is now 3 1/2 games behind.

Royals’ starter Jason Hammel (7-10) allowed Polanco’s two-run home run in the first and a run in the third, before retiring 12 straight. He allowed four earned runs on seven hits in 6 1/3 innings.

Moustakas hit a three-run, line-drive homer to right for a 5-2 lead in the third. It was his 36th of the year and first in 13 games since Aug. 15. He tied Steve Balboni for the most by a Kansas City player in a season. Moustakas is one of four players trailing New York’s Aaron Judge by one for the AL lead.

“Once it got to 35 it kind of started creeping in my head a little bit, but that’s when I tried to do a little too much,” he said. “Today, I was kind of relaxed.”

Making his fourth start of the season, Minnesota’s Dillon Gee (1-2) allowed five earned runs in 2 2/3 innings.

Moss hit a two-run home run of Tyler Duffey in the sixth to make it 7-3.

CLOSING A CAREER

Former closer Joe Nathan signed a one-day contract with Minnesota Friday to retire as a Twin.

Nathan, 42, saved 260 games for the Twins during seven seasons — including a career-high 47 in 2009. He also pitched for the Giants, Rangers, Tigers and Cubs during a 16-year career. The six-time all-star, drafted by San Francisco as a shortstop, ranks eighth on the all-time saves list with 377.

“(This was) a ride that I could not have imagined I could have gone down,” he said during an emotional new conference.

TRAINERS ROOM

Royals: LHP Brian Flynn (left groin strain) was transferred to the 60-day disabled list … RHP Trevor Cahill (right shoulder impingement syndrome) was reinstated from the 10-day disabled list.

Twins: CF Byron Buxton, who missed Thursday’s game with a bone contusion on his left hand, pinch ran in the ninth. . LHP Hector Santiago was moved to the 60-day disabled list. Out since July 3 with an upper back strain, he is scheduled to make his second rehab start Sunday at Triple-A Rochester.

UP NEXT

Minnesota’s Kyle Gibson (8-10, 5.59) is scheduled to face Kansas City’s Onelki Garcia (0-0, 7.94) Saturday in game two of the weekend series.

— Associated Press —

Western volleyball splits first two matches of the season

BIG RAPIDS, Mich. – Griffon volleyball split a pair of games in the opening day of the Ferris State Invitational. Missouri Western fell in the first game to #14 Ferris State 3-0 (25-18, 25-21, 25-18) and swept Davenport in game two 3-0 (25-20, 26-24, 25-21).

FORCEFUL ATTACKS
In its sweep of Davenport, MWSU hammered 50 kills as a team. Shellby Taylor finished with a match-high 13 kills as Ali Tauchen added 12 kills for the Griffons. Taylor also had a hitting percentage of .440 as Tauchen finished the match hitting .320.

STAYING ALIVE
With a 1-0 match lead, MWSU found itself in a tough spot late in the second set, down 24-23. Stephanie Doak provided a saving kill to tie the set at 24 and keep the Griffons alive. Back-to-back errors from the Panthers allowed Missouri Western to win the set 26-24 and take a 2-0 match lead. The second set would be the only scare DU would provide in the match.

FIRST IMPRESSIONS
Newcomers Ali Tauchen and Mikayla Sellers-Wiebe made their first appearances for Missouri Western memorable. The duo led the team with a combined 15 kills in game one against FSU. Tauchen and Sellers-Wiebe would not be a one-hit wonder as they combined for 19 kills in game two.

UP NEXT
Missouri Western wraps up the Ferris State Invitation on Saturday, Sept. 2 with a pair of matches. The Griffons open with Grand Valley State at 11 a.m. CST and close out the day with Northern Michigan at 3 p.m. CST.

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest volleyball opens season by going 1-1

The Northwest Missouri State University volleyball team earned a season-opening split on Friday at the Ferris State Invitational in Big Rapids, Mich.

– The Bearcats (1-1) fell to Northern Michigan in the season opener, 3-2, but rebounded to beat Grand Valley State, 3-1, in the afternoon session.
Match One Key Statistics (Northern Michigan 3, Northwest 2)

– Northern Michigan won the first set, 25-15, but Northwest battled back to win the second, 25-21. After the Wildcats took a tough 25-23 third set, the Bearcats forced a fourth set with a 25-23 victory.

– In the final set, Northern Michigan rallied off six straight points to take the match with a 15-7 win.

– Maddy Bruder had 11 kills with nine digs and two blocks.

– Freshman Morgan Lewis had 10 kills and a team-high five blocks.

– Sofia Schleppenbach had 10 kills and four blocks.

– Olivia Nowakowski had 18 digs with a pair of service aces and two assists.

– Sarah Dannettell had 23 assists and nine digs.

– Jordyn Musselman added 18 assists with eight digs and a service ace.

Match One Key Sequence
– Tied at 19-19 in the fourth set, Northwest rallied with four-straight points. After a pair of Wildcat errors, Nowakowski got a service ace to drop and Alexis Williams had a kill off a Dannettell assist. After a timeout and a Northern Michigan point, Williams gave the Bearcats set point with a kill to make it 24-20. The Wildcats would go on a quick 3-0 run to pull within one, 24-23. After a Northwest timeout, Taylor Linenberger put away the set with a kill from Dannettell.

Match Two Key Statistics (Northwest 3, Grand Valley State 1)
– After dropping the first set to the Laker, 25-20, the Bearcats rebounded to win the next three by scores of 25-22, 25-22 and 25-20.

– Darcy Sunderman had a team-high 11 kills, hitting .323 for the match. She added 14 digs with a pair of blocks and a service ace.

– Schleppenbach had nine kills with three blocks and two digs.

– Dannettell had 20 assists with eight digs and a service ace.

– Nowakowski had a match-high 23 digs with three assists and a service ace.

– Bruder had seven kills with 13 digs and a block.

– Linenberger had nine kills with three digs and a pair of blocks.

Match Two Key Sequences
– Grand Valley took a 22-21 lead in the second and was looked to take a two set lead. But the Bearcats battled back and closed on a 4-0 run to even the match. After a service error by the Lakers, Sunderman came up with a kill and Northwest forced a GVSU attacking error. On set point, Sunderman put away a kill off a Dannettell assist.

– In the fourth set, Northwest trailed by two late, 20-18. Sunderman and Williams each put away kills to even the match, 20-20. A Laker attacking error forced a GVSU timeout with the Bearcats leading, 21-20. Out of the break, Grand Valley had a bad set to make it 22-20 and Williams made it a 23-20 game with a kill. Williams and Schleppenbach then came up with blocks on back-to-back points to give Northwest the set and the match.

Up Next
– The Ferris State Invitational concludes on Saturday. Northwest will face Davenport University at 9 a.m. CST and then will face host Ferris State at 1 p.m.

— Northwest Athletics —

Griffons struggle in season opener, lose at Nebraska-Kearney 14-3

KEARNEY, Neb. – A strong defensive effort was overshadowed by offensive miscues in a 14-3 season opening loss at Nebraska-Kearney for the Missouri Western football team and first-year head coach Matt Williamson.

The Griffon defense limited UNK to just seven points and 270 yards, but the MWSU offense mustered just 209 yards, including 37 yards rushing after rushing for 329 against the Lopers last season. The loss snapped a streak of eight-straight wins over Nebraska-Kearney for the Griffons.

DEFENSE SHOWS UP
The Missouri Western defense allowed just one touchdown in the game and held UNK to 120 yards on the ground and 137 yards passing. UNK’s lone touchdown drive was just a six-play, 59-yard drive in the second quarter. MWSU sacked UNK quarterback Steve Worthington twice and broke up three passes. Jonathan Owens and Anthony Williams each had eight tackles. Darrian Bass had seven tackles and 1.5 sacks.

COSTLY PENALTIES
Missouri Western actually had two less penalties than UNK, with seven total, but those went for 85 yards – 10 more than the Lopers. Some came at costly times as well, including two early penalties that negated what would have been third down conversions that ended up resulting in punts.

WINDMILLER INJURED
Senior quarterback Skyler Windmiller exited the game on what wound up being Missouri Western’s final offensive drive of the season. After a promising drive that saw Windmiller complete four of his first six passes to get the Griffons from their own 15 to their own 34, he was sacked for a nine yard loss and fell hard on his left shoulder. Corey Bertini finished the drive and the game for MWSU at quarterback. Windmiller was 14-33 with one interception that was returned for a touchdown and 131 yards. Bertini went 4-8 for 41 yards.

UP NEXT
Missouri Western hosts Missouri Southern on Thursday, Sept. 7 at Spratt Memorial Stadium. Missouri Southern lost 48-7 at home Thursday night to Fort Hays State.

— MWSU Athletics —-

No. 1 Bearcats blank 4th-ranked Emporia State 34-0

By David Boyce – Northwest Athletics

MARYVILLE, Mo. – On its first possession in the second half, Northwest Missouri State checked off the one phase it had a tad bit of trouble: completing a drive.

Already leading by 13 points, the Bearcats quickly marched 83 yards in eight plays and scored on a 6-yard touchdown run by senior Cameron Wilcox. The score gave Northwest, ranked No. 1 in the AFCA top 25, a commanding lead on the way to an impressive 34-0 victory over No. 4 Emporia State Thursday evening in front of 8,055 fans at Bearcat Stadium. Northwest increased its winning streak to 31 straight games.

“It was a lot of fun,” said Northwest senior quarterback Zach Martin, who completed 18 of 26 passes for 314 yards and one touchdown. “There is no place in Division II football like this. There is nothing better than this place.”

It was an impressive debut for first-year head coach Rich Wright, who in the previous six years orchestrated a bone-crushing defense that helped Northwest win three of the last four national championships.

“It was a lot of fun. So we begin,” Wright said. “I told the kids in the locker room that it is going to be their work, and their effort and everything we do moving forward will be based on their merit. They went out and played their tails off tonight. They played with a lot of energy and a lot of passion and played for each other. I was proud of their effort.

“We have a lot of things we can correct. There are a lot of ways we can grow as a football team, but I felt like that was a pretty good first step.”

Wright, who kept his defensive coordinating duties, still has the magic touch in making it difficult for opponents to score. Emporia State entered the game with junior Braxton Marstall, selected by many to be one of the top quarterbacks in Division II.

The Bearcats never allowed him to be comfortable in the pocket. Add in that Northwest special teams scored a touchdown in the first half that it became apparent Emporia State had no chance to beat the Bearcats once Northwest finished off drives.

Making his first start at quarterback for Northwest, Martin demonstrated a strong and accurate arm early in the third quarter. He showed that potential in the first half when he just missed on a couple of long pass attempts.

“They just prepared me so well throughout the week,” Martin said. “JB (Jonathan Baker) and I have been battling back and forth. We have done a good job of pushing each other and getting better every play. I have so many play makers around me that it is easy.”

Martin and Baker both showed the unselfish traits that previous quarterbacks at Northwest have exhibited. Afterwards, Baker smiled and uttered nothing but positive words about the home-opener. Because of the score, Baker saw action in the fourth quarter and completed two of three passes.

Martin made his presence felt early in the third quarter when he completed a 20-yard pass to senior Jordan Grove to the 50. Four plays later, Martin hit senior tight end Clayton Wilson on a 35-yard pass play that included Wilson leaping over an Emporia State defender to the one.

“I think it took him a little bit of time to knock the rust off,” said Northwest offensive coordinator Charlie Flohr. “He hasn’t played in a meaningful college football game in over two years. I was real proud of him, the rest of our offense and the way they came out and responded in the second half, scoring on the first drive.”

After a 5-yard penalty, Northwest scored its first offensive touchdown of the 2017 season on a 6-yard run by Wilcox.

“That’s what we were talking about at halftime that we have to finish off our drives,” Martin said. “It was great to go out there and finish a drive finally.”

Four minutes later, Northwest scored again on a 2-yard run by Grove. The icing on the cake came with 10:30 left in the game when Martin tossed a 54-yard touchdown bomb to junior Shawn Bane Jr. That was a significant play because Bane was returning from a torn ACL he suffered in the 10th game last season.

“I didn’t think about the injury, honestly,” Bane said. “I feel like I am 100 percent. It was a great feeling. It was a relief. It was everything I thought it was.”

Bane’s touchdown gave the Northwest a 34-0 lead in one of its most impressive season-openers.

While Northwest has the pedigree of a champion, there were a few unknowns were coming into the game because of the change in the head coach, a new starting quarterback and replacing a stellar defensive line. Northwest spectacularly answered those question.

Unless you expect a defense to give no yards in the first half, you must say Northwest played flawlessly to take a 13-0 lead into halftime. The Bearcats prevented a high-powered Emporia State offense from reaching the end zone.

“We played together, we talked and communicated really well,” said junior defensive end Austen Eskew, who recorded seven tackles, including one sack and two tackles accounted for 14 lost yards. We made a lot of mistakes, but it was the first week.

“Coach Wright, the coach that he is and the person that he is, he looks at every aspect of every play. He comes to practice every day wanting to improve, and he brings that energy to us.”

Remember, a year ago in the season-opener at Emporia State the Hornets held a 7-3 lead after the first quarter.

Emporia State put a brief scare into the Bearcats in the first drive of the game when junior quarterback Marstall Braxton completed a 31-yard pass to Carson Proffitt in the opening series.

Northwest quickly bounced back with two sacks and forced a punt. It took Northwest a few series to get rolling on offense. Late in the first quarter, the Bearcats put together a 12-play, 82-yard drive that resulted in a 20-yard field goal by junior Brett Garner with 2:02 left.

But the play of the first half came less than 3 minutes later when Emporia State set up for a 43-yard field goal. Freshman Samuel Roberts filled the middle and stuck his paw up to block the punt.

Amazingly, the ball settled into the hands of junior Anthony Lane, who raced down the sidelines 69 yards for a touchdown. The score gave Northwest a 10-0 lead with 14:41 left in the second quarter.

The Bearcats turned up their defense in the second quarter, allowing Emporia State one scoring opportunity in the closing seconds until halftime. Northwest stopped a fake field goal attempt as time ran out.

“It all started with preparation in practice,” said Northwest senior safety Edward Richey. “The guys were locked in from the moment we switched over from fall camp to transition into Emporia.

“But we definitely have a lot of things we need to work on. We pitched a shutout, but we didn’t play perfect, by any means. But it was great to shut out a great team like that. It lets us know what we can be.”

Northwest consistently moved the ball in the first half, but was just missed on a couple of big plays and was unable to punch the ball into the end zone when it got inside the 10.

Still, the Bearcats managed to increase its lead to 13-0 on a 21-yard field goal by Garner with 3:37 left in the first half.

Statistically, the game was fairly close. Northwest had 212 yards of total offense compared to 154 yards for Emporia State. But that is a little deceptive because a bulk of the Hornets yards came on two big plays.

“We have been working all summer for moments like this,” Bane said. “We left a couple of plays on the field. We are going to go back to the drawing board and start over again.”

— Northwest Athletics —-

Royals drop series finale against Tampa Bay

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Logan Morrison, Steven Souza Jr. and Adeiny Hechavarria each went deep and the Tampa Bay Rays beat the Kansas City Royals 5-3 on Wednesday night for their latest series victory.

The Rays took two out of three and have won three consecutive series. The Royals lost 18 of 28 games in August, including six of seven to end the month.

Morrison, who was born in Kansas City, has four home runs, eight RBI and six runs in the first six games of Tampa Bay’s current road trip. Morrison hit his 33rd homer with two outs in the fifth against Jason Vargas (14-9).

Souza hit his 29th earlier in the fifth, snapping a 3-3 tie.

Rays right-hander Jake Odorizzi (7-7), who failed to make it out of the fourth inning in his previous two starts, allowed three runs and four hits over five-plus innings.

Hechavarria homered with one out in the Rays’ three-run third. The inning also included Souza’s RBI single and Evan Longoria’s sacrifice fly.

Whit Merrifield hit a three-run homer in the third to account for all of the Royals’ runs.

Vargas gave up five runs and seven hits, including the three home runs, over six innings. The All-Star left-hander started the year 12-3 with an AL-leading 2.22 ERA, but is 2-6 with a 7.20 ERA over his past 10 starts.

Alex Colome gave up a single in the ninth, but picked up his major league-leading 40th save in 45 chances.

GORDON SITS

Royals left fielder Alex Gordon, who is hitting .199 with five home runs and 37 RBI, was not in the lineup for the second straight game.

SWEET 16 CLUB

Six Royals have 16 or more home runs — Merrifield, Jorge Bonifacio, Eric Hosmer, Salvador Perez, Mike Moustakas and Brandon Moss. That matches the 1977 team for a club record with six players hitting at least 16 homers. George Brett, Hal McRae, Amos Otis, Darrell Porter, Al Cowens and John Mayberry accomplished it that season.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: RHP Trevor Cahill (shoulder impingement syndrome) threw all of his pitches in a 30-pitch bullpen series and said he felt good. He could be activated Friday when rosters can expand to 40.

UP NEXT

Rays: After a day off Thursday, LHP Blake Snell will start Friday at the White Sox. He held the Cardinals to four hits and two runs over seven innings Saturday in a no-decision in his prior start.

Royals: RHP Jason Hammel will start Friday in the series opener at Minnesota after a travel day Thursday.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals’ rally comes up short at Milwaukee

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Pitcher Corey Knebel told center fielder Keon Broxton he owes him big time.

For good reason.

Domingo Santana and Jonathan Villar homered in the sixth inning, and Broxton made a leaping catch over the wall for the final out in the Milwaukee Brewers’ 6-5 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Wednesday.

Knebel pitched the ninth for his 30th save. He allowed a leadoff single to Yadier Molina, struck out the next two batters, and then watched Broxton snag Randal Grichuk’s deep blast to end the game.

“I wouldn’t say it’s the best one I’ve ever made, but it’s definitely one of the most important ones I’ve made,” Broxton said. “It’s huge. It’s everything. It’s what every outfielder dreams of: making a catch like that in the bottom of the ninth to secure the win. It was a lot of fun, for sure.”

Broxton replaced starting center fielder Hernan Perez with one out in the eighth as part of a double switch.

“I’m glad he was in there, for sure,” Milwaukee manager Craig Counsell said. “Although Hernan Perez says he would’ve made the play.”

Chase Anderson (8-3) gave up two hits — both homers — in six innings, three earned runs, struck out six and walked two to improve to 4-0 in nine starts at Miller Park this season.

Santana hit his 22nd homer of the season and Villar’s was his 10th, giving Milwaukee a franchise-record nine players with at least 10 homers in a season.

St. Louis fell 2 1/2 games behind the second-place Brewers in the NL Central despite two home runs from Tommy Pham, who has 19 on the season.

Carlos Martinez (10-10), who entered the game 3-0 in his past four starts, allowed 10 hits, six runs — three earned — and struck out seven in 5 2/3 innings.

Milwaukee won for the 10th time in its past 15 games by scoring three times in the sixth. Santana led off with an opposite-field homer to right, Stephen Vogt reached when his ground ball went through the legs of third baseman Matt Carpenter and Villar followed with another opposite-field shot to left for a 6-3 lead.

Grichuk hit his 17th homer in the fifth and St. Louis manager Mike Matheny thought he had another in the ninth.

“It was a good play, a good at-bat, too,” Matheny said. “Off the bat, I thought that ball was far enough, but he made a great play out there.”

LEAKE TRADED

Before the game, St. Louis sent starting pitcher Mike Leake to the Seattle Mariners for minor-league infielder Rayder Ascanio.

The 29-year-old Leake, who signed a five-year deal with St. Louis before the 2016 season, waived the no-trade clause in his contract.

He was 7-12 with a 4.21 ERA this season, but lost 10 of his previous 12 decisions after getting off to a 5-2 start.

Leake was scheduled to pitch at San Francisco on Friday, but it appears the Cardinals will bring up a prospect from Triple-A Memphis to take his place.

BASERUNNING GAFFES

Milwaukee not only had a runner thrown out at home and third base in the fourth inning, one of the racing sausages at Miller Park fell during the contest in the middle of the sixth.

STATS

St. Louis hit three home runs in a game in which it totaled five or fewer hits for the first time since April 8, 2004, also against Milwaukee.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Michael Wacha (9-7) takes a three-game losing streak into his start at San Francisco.

Brewers: RHP Zach Davies (15-7) is 8-3 in his past 12 starts and has not allowed a run in the past 13 2/3 innings.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: Molina played after he was a late scratch Tuesday because of right lower abdominal soreness.

Brewers: Manny Pina did not play because of an apparent leg injury he sustained in the fourth inning Tuesday that forced him to leave the game.

— Associated Press —

Mizzou women’s basketball adds transfer guard Haley Troup

COLUMBIA, Mo. – Mizzou Women’s Basketball added transfer Haley Troup to the program, head coach Robin Pingeton announced Wednesday. Troup joins the Tigers after originally signing with South Carolina and will sit out the 2017-18 campaign due to NCAA transfer rules. She has four years of eligibility remaining.

Troup is a 5-foot-10 guard from Gadsden, Ala., who racked up 2,284 career points, 1,235 career rebounds and 842 career assists in her illustrious career at Gadsden High School. She poured in 19.4 points and grabbed seven rebounds per game in 2016-17. The standout senior campaign earned her Alabama Super All-State First Team recognition.

As a junior, Troup averaged 17.9 points, 6.6 rebounds and 4.1 assists and claimed a spot in the Alabama North/South All-Star Game in July of 2016. She was the Gadsden Messenger Co-Player of the Year and was named a finalist for Alabama Sports Writers Association Class 7A Player of the Year.

Troup garnered Alabama Sports Writers Class 7A First Team honors in 2016. By the end of her junior season, she was already in her school’s 1,000-point club as well as the 1,000-rebound club.

Troup joins a host of talented newcomers joining Pingeton’s program this fall, including redshirt junior Lauren Aldridge and freshmen Elle Brown, Nadia Green, Emmanuelle Tahane and Kelsey Winfrey. Mizzou opens the 2017-18 season Nov. 10 vs. Western Kentucky at the Hawkeye Challenge in Iowa City, Iowa. The Tigers’ home slate launches Nov. 16 against Wright State at Mizzou Arena.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Royals end scoreless drought, beat Rays 6-2

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Whit Merrifield finally put the Kansas City Royals back on the scoreboard.

Merrifield, Jorge Bonifacio and Eric Hosmer homered as the Royals snapped a 45-inning scoreless streak on their way to a 6-2 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on Tuesday night.

Merrifield’s 16th home run with two outs in the third ended Kansas City’s drought, three innings shy of the major league record. The 1906 Philadelphia Athletics and 1968 Chicago Cubs share the mark with 48 scoreless innings in a row.

“Excitement, relief,” Merrifield said. “It seems to build and build and build. It’s nice to end it. It’s a 0-0 game and to put us on the board for the first time in a long time, it was a good feeling. I knew once we got one that things would pick up and they did.”

Royals rookie Jake Junis (6-2) did not allow a hit until a one-out single in the fifth. He struck out a career-high eight and walked none over 5 2/3 innings. Junis is 4-0 in his last six appearances.

“I had that slider working today and was throwing my fastball to both sides of the plate,” Junis said. “I was throwing a lot of strikes and just attacking hitters.”

Hosmer’s three-run homer, his 22nd, in the seventh off left-hander Dan Jennings gave the Royals a cushion.

“DJ is in a little bit of a rut right now,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “Homers got him now twice lately and that’s unfortunate, but I have confidence he’ll get over that and we’ll move past it.”

Bonifacio connected with two outs in the sixth off Alex Cobb (9-9).

Kansas City remained three games behind Minnesota for the second AL wild card.

“We’re getting down to the end right now, so each game is huge for us,” Hosmer said.

Cobb gave up a run on three singles and three wild pitches in the fourth. Hosmer scored on Mike Moustakas’ single, but the Royals stranded runners at second and third.

“The streak, the whole thing is pretty mind-blowing,” Cobb said. “That’s a team that’s got a really good offensive squad. You’re not going to get a team like that to slump for that many games in a row. Honestly, the pitch to Whit was a good one. If I could throw it again and know that it would end up in that location again, I would. It was just, he put an unbelievable swing on it. It was on the chalk, inside the batter’s box.”

Junis was removed after giving up Evan Longoria’s single. Scott Alexander yielded a run-scoring single to Logan Morrison and walked Steven Souza Jr. to load the bases. Corey Dickerson’s groundout ended the inning.

“I was hoping we could hold on there and just get the win,” Junis said. “We needed that game really bad.”

Brad Miller homered off Brandon Maurer in the seventh, cutting Kansas City’s lead to 3-2.

CHALLENGE KINGS

The Royals won three replay challenges in the first six innings. The first two reversals in the first and fifth gave Lorenzo Cain infield singles after he had initially been called out. In the sixth, Lucas Duda struck out swinging on a pitch that hit him. Kevin Kiermaier stole second on the play, but after a review was sent back to first because the ball was ruled dead after hitting Duda in the foot.

KUNTZ IN DUGOUT

Royals first base coach Rusty Kuntz is having vision problems after eye surgery and will be in the dugout the rest of the season setting outfield alignments. Kansas City manager Ned Yost said Kuntz never saw three balls hit toward right field Monday, including one that missed him by about 5 feet. “It’s just getting to a point now where it’s just dangerous for him to be out there,” Yost said. “We don’t want to take a chance of having anything serious happening.” Catching coach Pedro Grifol replaced Kuntz in the coach’s box at first.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals LHP Brian Flynn was placed on the disabled list after one outing. He strained his left groin Monday. LHP Eric Skoglund was recalled from Triple-A Omaha.

UP NEXT

Rays: RHP Jake Odorizzi, who starts the series finale, has failed to get out of the fourth inning in his last two starts.

Royals: All-Star LHP Jason Vargas is 2-5 with a 6.69 ERA in his past eight starts.

— Associated Press —

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