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Northwest Missouri State’s Caenepeel named MIAA Pitcher of the Year

Northwest2013riggertKANSAS CITY, Mo. – Northwest Missouri State University’s Anthony Caenepeel has been named the MIAA Pitcher of the Year in a press release from the conference office on Thursday. Caenepeel was named First Team All-MIAA while five other Bearcats also garnered all-conference honors. Nikko Pablo was named to the All-MIAA Third Team as a relief pitcher. Earning honorable mention were Ozzie Adams, Landon Figg, Garrett Fort and Luke Hassman.

Caenepeel leads the MIAA with 103 strikeouts, setting a Northwest single season record. His 94.2 innings pitched is the second most among conference pitchers and his eight victories puts him in a tie for second. He has held opponents to a .231 batting average, ranking sixth in the MIAA. He holds the Bearcat career record with 256 strikeouts and 266.0 innings pitched.

Pablo has transitioned seamlessly into the Northwest closer role. His 10 saves this season rank third in the MIAA. He has appeared in a Northwest record 79 contests in his four seasons. This year, he has appeared 31 times, working 46.1 innings. He has struck out 42 batters and allowed just 10 walks. Pablo has a 5-1 record and holds a career-low 3.30 ERA.

Fort is hitting a career-high .303 this season, making 49 starts. He has tallied 59 hits with 12 doubles, a triple and two home runs. He has scored 40 runs this season and stolen eight bases. Adams has appeared and started all 49 games for the Bearcats at second base. This year he is hitting a career-high .327 with 66 hits, 13 doubles, one triple and three home runs. He has scored 35 runs and tallied 34 RBIs while compiling a 96.9 fielding percentage. Figg is hitting .307 this season with 40 runs scored and 35 RBIs. He has also started all 49 contests for the Bearcats, compiling 58 hits with 15 doubles and five home runs. Hassman is in his first season with the Bearcats, hitting a team-best .328. He has 45 hits with nine doubles and six home runs. This year had has driven in 27 RBIs and scored 21 runs.

— Northwest Athletics —

Griffon women fall short of NCAA National Championships but Yong qualifies individually

riggertMissouriWesternSIOUX FALLS, S.D. – Missouri Western freshman Chong Yong won a sudden death playoff to clinch an individual spot in the NCAA National Championship tournament. Missouri Western finished the Super Regional at Minnehaha Country Club in sixth place.

Yong punched her ticket to the National Championship by paring the 10th hole in the playoff. She finished in seventh place with a 229 and shot a 4-over-par 75 for the day. Shi Qing Ong carded an 82 for the round and finished tied for 17th with a 232. Madison Romjue ended her tournament tied for 23rd after scoring an 82 on the day and 237 over the three days. Tiffanie Yabut and Jenna Kosmatka were both at 83 for the day.

Chong Yong advances to the National Championship Tournament on May 17-20 in Findlay, Ohio at Findlay Country Club. It is the second consecutive year the Griffons will have at least one player qualify for the National Championship.

— MWSU Athletics —

Royals get crushed by Tampa Bay Wednesday 12-1

riggertRoyalsST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — The Tampa Bay Rays’ 12-1 victory over the Kansas City Royals was marred by one ugly moment.

Chris Archer pitched eight shutout innings Wednesday night and Logan Morrison, Rickie Weeks Jr., and Colby Rasmus homered for the Rays.

With Tampa Bay leading 7-0 in the seventh inning, Archer hit Kansas City catcher Salvador Perez in the left elbow with a pitch, and Perez took issue with it.

Words were exchanged, providing the emotional highlight of a game that had very few of them, at least from the Royals’ point of view.

Archer (3-1) won for the first time in five starts since April 14 to help the Rays break a three-game losing streak. He scattered five singles and walked none, and his control is one of the reasons Perez had a problem with the pitch that hit him.

“Yeah, of course he threw at me. He’s going to throw at me because I had two hits against him,” Perez said. “I think he was mad. I don’t think that’s the right way.”

“Honestly there was nothing malicious there,” Archer said. “I’ve had some great interactions with him the past. He’s a good hitter; I’m trying to pitch inside. There was no malicious intent with 96 mph.”

Asked if he understood Perez’s angry reaction, Archer said: “No.”

Morrison’s ninth homer of the season, and his fourth in seven games, came off Kansas City starter Jason Hammel with a man on in the third inning. Weeks followed with his second home run, putting the Rays up 4-0.

Rasmus hit a grand slam off reliever Peter Moylan in the eighth, the sixth slam of his career.

Everyone in the Tampa Bay lineup had at least one hit for the second straight day. Corey Dickerson had a triple and a single and scored three runs.

Hammel (1-4) gave up six earned runs and 13 hits in seven innings, dropping to 0-6 in his last seven road starts.

The Rays scored their first run on a sacrifice fly double play. With Dickerson on third base, Evan Longoria on first and one out in the first inning, Morrison hit a short fly ball that was caught by Royals shortstop Alcides Escobar. Longoria was caught too far off base and doubled up, but not until after Dickerson had tagged up and scored.

Archer threw 101 pitches, marking his 17th straight start in which he threw at least 100 pitches. It was the 20th double-digit strikeout game of his career and his first win against the Royals.

“(The Royals) have given all of us fits and have given (Archer) fits, too,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “I don’t think he did anything differently tonight. He’s in a good rhythm right now and it carries over game to game.”

FIRST HIT, RBI FOR SOLER

Jorge Soler drove in Kansas City’s only run with a ninth-inning double off reliever Jose Alvarado. It was the first hit as a Royal for Soler, who came in a Dec. 7 trade with the Chicago Cubs for reliever Wade Davis. Soler came off the DL on Saturday after having a strained left oblique. He is 1 for 16 in five games.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: RHP Ian Kennedy (hamstring) has resumed throwing off a mound. … RHP Seth Maness, who underwent surgery on Aug. 18 to repair a torn UCL in his throwing elbow, had his contract purchased from Triple-A Omaha.

Rays: RF Steven Souza Jr. (sore thumb) was out of the lineup for the second consecutive game. … SS Matt Duffy (Achilles’ tendon surgery) had no soreness one day after his first rehab game with Class-A Charlotte. He had Wednesday off.

UP NEXT

Thursday’s series finale features two of the hottest pitchers in the AL. Royals LHP Jason Vargas is 4-1 with a league-leading 1.19 ERA. Rays RHP Jake Odorizzi (2-1, 2.88) has given up only eight hits in his last four starts, one of which he left after one inning with a strained hamstring.

— Associated Press —

MWSU’s McCarthy shoots lowest career round on final day of NCAA Super Regional

riggertMissouriWesternAXTELL, Neb. – Missouri Western freshman golfer Patrick McCarthy shot a season best 3-under-par 69 in his final round of the NCAA Super Regional at Awarii Dunes. He finished the tournament with a 213, another season best for him in a three-round tournament.

He birdied five of his last nine holes including three of the first four holes after making the turn off of the back nine. McCarthy finished tied for 37th and is the only freshman in Griffon men’s golf history to qualify for the Super Regional as an individual.

Keenai Sampson of McKendree University carded a 199 for the tournament title as Central Missouri won the team championship with an 831.

— MWSU Athletics —

Northwest tennis earns four ITA regional awards

Northwest2013riggertSKILLMAN, N.J. – The Northwest Missouri State University men’s tennis team received four ITA Central Region awards at the NCAA National Championship site in Altamonte Springs, Fla. Head coach Mark Roswell, Aymeric Autones, Romain Boissinot and Sergi Fontcuberta were all honored with individual regional honors.

Rosewell was named the Wilson/ITA Coach of the Year after leading the Bearcats to the region’s top ranking. Autones as named the region’s Most Improved Player (senior) and Boissinot was the ITA Senior Player of the Year. Fontcuberta garnered ITA Player to Watch accolades.

Central Region
Wilson/ITA Coach of the Year: Mark Rosewell, Northwest Missouri State University

ITA Assistant Coach of the Year: Fanni Varga, Southwest Baptist University

ITA Most Improved Player (Senior): Aymeric Autones, Northwest Missouri State University

ITA Senior Player of the Year: Romain Boissinot, Northwest Missouri State University

ITA Rookie of the Year: Ferenc Agoston, Southwest Baptist University

ITA Player to Watch: Sergi Fontcuberta, Northwest Missouri State University

ITA/Arthur Ashe Leadership and Sportsmanship Award: Christian Blodig, Southwest Baptist University

ITA Community Service Award: Emporia State University

— Northwest Athletics —

Fowler again helps St. Louis rally past Miami to sweep series

riggertCardinalsMIAMI (AP) — Bob Gibson, Stan Musial, Dizzy Dean and Rogers Hornsby never had a trip with the Cardinals like the one they completed Wednesday night.

Dexter Fowler hit a pinch-hit, go-ahead triple and St. Louis overcame a four-run deficit for the second game in a row, rallying past Miami 7-5 to conclude a trip that by one measure ranked as the franchise’s best ever.

The Cardinals went 6-0 on their swing through Atlanta and Miami. It’s the first time they’ve gone undefeated on a trip of at least six games in their 126-year history, the team said, citing information from Elias.

“That’s hard to believe with some of the great teams that have been through here,” manager Mike Matheny said. “That’s a pretty impressive statement.”

Lance Lynn gave up four runs in the first inning on homers by Christian Yelich and Justin Bour, but for the second consecutive game, Fowler came off the bench to give the Cardinals the lead. His two-run triple in the sixth put them ahead to stay, 5-4.

Fowler, out of the starting lineup for the past six games because of a sore lat, drove in the winning run in the ninth inning Tuesday after St. Louis rallied from a 5-1 eighth-inning deficit.

“I love the result and what it takes to come from behind like that, but the club can’t keep doing that,” Matheny said. “It just beats everybody up. But it’s huge to have that capability. Not every team does.”

The Cardinals’ six-game winning streak is their longest since June 2015, and they have won nine consecutive road games. They have recovered from a 3-9 start to climb into the NL Central lead, and they are a season-high five games above .500 (19-14).

Jedd Gyorko had three hits and two RBI, scored a run and stole a base for St. Louis. Rookie sensation Magneuris Sierra singled, walked and scored twice.

“Even when we were down four, it was so early,” first baseman Matt Carpenter said. “We felt like the way we’ve been swinging the bat, we were going to have a chance. Our lineup right now is pretty dangerous, so four runs didn’t feel like we were that far behind.”

Miami’s Tom Koehler couldn’t hold the early lead, allowing four runs in 5 1/3 innings. Jarlin Garcia (0-1) gave up two runs in the sixth for the Marlins, who have blown leads of four runs or more to lose three times in the past week.

“It seems we’re finding new ways every night to lose a game,” Koehler said. “It’s tough. We have to find a way to snap out of it.”

The Marlins were shorthanded after losing four players on the left side of their infield since Sunday to injuries. Two-time All-Star second baseman Dee Gordon started at shortstop for the first time since 2013 and handled four chances.

Lynn needed 104 pitches to get through four innings, his shortest outing of the season. He left trailing 4-3 and his ERA rose from 2.04, second-best in the NL, to 2.75.

But Lynn and six relievers limited Miami to one run over the final 8 1/3 innings. Sam Tuivailala (2-0) pitched a scoreless fifth, and Seung Hwan Oh escaped a two-on, no-out situation in the ninth for his ninth save.

“We pitch well, and when we don’t pitch well, the offense picks us up,” Lynn said. “That’s how winning teams do it. You turn it up when you need to.”

COMPLETE GAME

Marlins manager Don Mattingly went the distance after being ejected early in each of the first two games of the series. He said his wife videotaped their 2-year-old son, Louis, imitating Dad arguing with an umpire. “She sent me a video of Louis moving his hands all over the place,” Mattingly said. “That was cute. I guess my hands move around. People have told me that before. The fact he notices it is a little scary.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: CF Fowler is expected to rejoin the starting lineup Friday against the Cubs.

Marlins: RHP Edinson Volquez (blister) and LHP Wei-Yin Chen (tired arm) threw bullpen sessions. Volquez remains on schedule to start Saturday against the Braves, while Chen won’t start before Tuesday at the earliest, Mattingly said.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: St. Louis opens an 11-day, eight-game home stand Friday when NL ERA leader Mike Leake (4-1, 1.79) starts against the Cubs.

Marlins: RHP Jose Urena (1-0, 1.69) is scheduled to make his second start of the season at home Friday against the Braves.

— Associated Press —

Missouri baseball’s Dave Silvestri Named SEC Legend

riggertMissouriCOLUMBIA, Mo. – Former Mizzou Baseball standout SS Dave Silvestri will be honored as part of the 2017 AT&T SEC Baseball Legends Class, announced Wednesday by the Southeastern Conference. Silvestri and honorees from three other SEC schools are set for recognition at this month’s SEC Tournament, scheduled for May 23-28 at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Alabama. One of the all-time Mizzou greats, Silvestri is the second Mizzou Baseball alum to earn SEC Legend distinction after Gene McArtor in 2013.

A two-time First Team All-American, Silvestri was a standout shortstop under Coach McArtor from 1986-88 and guided Mizzou to its first NCAA Regional appearance since 1981 as a junior during his final season with the program in 1988. He is the only player in school history to earn All-America First Team in two separate seasons. Silvestri remains one of the most decorated players to ever come through the Mizzou Baseball program. In addition to earning All-America honors in both 1987 and 1988, he was a two-time All-Big Eight selection, a two-time All-District V selection, and a 1988 All-Big Eight Tournament Team member.

After guiding Mizzou to the NCAA South Regional with 42 wins in 1988, Silvestri played with USA Baseball in the 1988 Seoul Summer Olympics. That team won the Gold Medal as Silvestri played along the likes of Tino Martinez, Jim Abbott, Andy Benes and Robin Ventura. Silvestri was drafted in the second round of the 1988 Major League Baseball First Year Player Draft by the Houston Astros. He played 181 games over eight seasons in the big leagues, including 86 games with the Montreal Expos in 1996. His first National League hit was a run-scoring, pinch-hit single against his hometown St. Louis Cardinals, at old Busch Stadium, in 1995.

One cannot look at the Mizzou Baseball record book without seeing Silvestri’s name all over it. He still holds the school single season records for slugging percentage (.849 in 1988), runs scored (89 in 1988), extra-base hits (47 in 1988) and total bases (186 in 1988). His .379 career batting average is fourth in program history and his .660 career slugging percentage is second all-time. His 18 career triples are a school record.

Silvestri ranks in Mizzou’s all-time career top 10 in 11 different categories: batting (fourth – .379), hits (sixth – 248), triples (first – 18), homers (seventh – 35), RBI (ninth – 167), runs scored (fifth – 206), extra-base hits (four – 96), total bases (fourth – 432), slugging (second – .660), stolen bases (fifth – 47) and on-base percentage (fifth – .465).

A native of St. Louis, Mo., Silvestri was inducted into the Mizzou Athletics Hall of Fame in 1997 and was widely considered the greatest Missouri Baseball player of his era.

— Mizzou Athletics —

Griffon women in third after day two of NCAA Central Super Regional

riggertMissouriWesternSIOUX FALLS, S.D. – The Missouri Western women’s golf team shot a 312 in the second round in the NCAA Super Regional at Minnehaha Country Club Tuesday. MWSU is currently in third place inn the team standings with a 620.

Shi Qing Ong is in third place individually with a 150 after she shot a 4-over-par 75 for the second day. Chong Yong carded a 78 for the round and is tied for 12th place with a 154. Madison Romjue trailed Yong by a stroke and finished tied for 16th with 155. Tiffanie Yabut knocked in an 80 as Jenna Kosmatka scored an 83 to round out the scoring for the day.

Arkansas Tech leads the team standings with a 608 as ATU’s Nuchakorn Nunbhakdi is the individual leader with a 6-over-par 148. Missouri Westerns tees off the third round at 9 a.m. Tuesday. If the Griffons can stay in the top three they would qualify for their second consecutive NCAA National Championship Tournament.

— MWSU Athletics —

Moustakas homers in 12th, Royals beat Rays 7-6

riggertRoyalsST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Mike Moustakas homered in the 12th inning, and the Kansas City Royals came back from a four-run deficit to beat the Tampa Bay Rays 7-6 on Tuesday night.

Moustakas connected against Diego Moreno (0-1), the eighth Tampa Bay pitcher, on a 1-2 pitch with one out. Moreno was promoted from Triple-A Durham before the game.

Kansas City right-hander Jakob Junis (1-0), recalled from Triple-A Omaha, worked out of a two-on, one-out jam in the 11th. Kelvin Herrera got three outs for his fifth save.

Salvador Perez hit a two-run homer for the Royals. The All-Star catcher went 3 for 4 and walked twice. He has six homers and 23 RBI in his last 24 games against Tampa Bay.

Logan Morrison went deep during Tampa Bay’s four-run first.

Perez hit a leadoff double in the eighth and scored on Alex Gordon’s single to tie it at 6.

Chris Young retired his first two batters in the first before Evan Longoria started a run of six straight Rays to reach base with an infield single. Morrison hit a two-run shot before Tim Beckham and Kevin Kiermaier added RBI singles.

Young, making his first start since July 5, allowed four runs, seven hits and four walks in three innings. The 37-year-old left-hander made the spot start in place of Ian Kennedy, who is on the 10-day disabled list after straining his right hamstring Thursday.

Beckham drove in his second run on a fifth-inning single off Travis Wood, who also gave up Brad Miller’s solo shot in the sixth that put Tampa Bay ahead 6-3.

Kansas City scored two runs in the seventh to pull within one. But Eric Hosmer got picked off first base by catcher Jesus Sucre to end the inning with Perez batting.

Tampa Bay’s Matt Andriese allowed three runs and five hits in 5 1/3 innings.

Rays manager Kevin Cash was ejected by third base umpire Bill Welke in the third for arguing a balk call on Andriese that allowed Jorge Bonifacio to score from third.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: LHP Scott Alexander was placed on the 10-day disabled list with a strained right hamstring.

Rays: RF Steven Souza Jr. sat out with a sore thumb, one day after getting jammed by a pitch. … SS Matt Duffy (Achilles’ tendon) started a rehab assignment with Class-A Charlotte.

UP NEXT

Royals: RHP Jason Hammel (1-3) looks to end a road skid Wednesday night against the Rays. He is 0-5 in six road starts since beating Milwaukee July 22 while with the Chicago Cubs.

Rays: RHP Chris Archer (2-1) attempts to beat the Royals for the first time Wednesday night. He is 0-4 with a 5.63 ERA in five starts against them.

— Associated Press —

Northwest tennis falls to No. 2 Barry in NCAA Tournament round of 16

Northwest2013riggertThe Northwest Missouri State University men’s tennis team fell to Barry University, 5-1, on Tuesday in the NCAA Tournament’s round of 16. The match was played at Sanlando Park in Altamonte Springs, Fla.

The No. 19 ranked Bearcats finish the year at 18-4 overall while No. 2 ranked Barry improves to 24-1 and advances to the NCAA Quarterfinals.

This season marked the ninth time in Northwest history the team had advanced to the NCAA Championship Tournament and the fifth straight appearance for the Bearcats.

After falling at No. 3 and No. 1 doubles, Northwest’s Romain Boissinot and Sergi Fontcuberta battled to win an 8-5 decision at the No. 2 position.

At No. 1 singles, Boissinot took No. 3 ranked Ahmed Tirki to a first set tie breaker but fell behind 7-6. His match was unfinished when the competition was called.

Aymeric Autones took the first set at No. 5 singles, 6-2, but dropped the second set when the match was called.

Sergi Fontcuberta battled back after dropping the first set at No. 2 singles to lead the second set, 4-2.

Scores
1. #34 Boissinot,Romain (NW) vs. #3 Ahmed Triki (BARRY) 6-7, 1-3, unfinished
2. #35 Fontcuberta,Sergi (NW) vs. #26 Pierre Montrieul (BARRY) 4-6, 4-4, unfinished
3. #13 Carlos Gomez (BARRY) def. Tete,Mauro (NW) 6-3, 6-3
4. #47 Nico Dreer (BARRY) def. Altmann,Josef (NW) 6-2, 6-2
5. Autones,Aymeric (NW) vs. Fabian Pronnet (BARRY) 6-2, 1-6, 0-1, unfinished
6. Thomas Bugeaud (BARRY) def. Glowick,Fin (NW) 6-1, 6-3

Doubles competition
1. #2 Ahmed Triki/Pierre Montrieul (BARRY) def. Tete,Mauro/Sherif,Youssef (NW) 8-4
2. Boissinot,Romain/Fontcuberta,Sergi (NW) def. #25 Carlos Gomez/Vivien Versier (BARRY) 8-5
3. Nico Dreer/Fernando Tous (BARRY) def. Altmann,Josef/Autones,Aymeric (NW) 8-2

— Northwest Athletics —

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