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Cuthbert, Duffy help Kansas City end losing streak, beat White Sox

riggertRoyalsCHICAGO (AP) — A couple days ago, maybe the ball Cheslor Cuthbert hit in the third inning would’ve been caught at the warning track.

On Saturday, the wind and the luck were on Kansas City’s side.

The World Series champion Royals ended an eight-game losing streak, with Cuthbert hitting two home runs and Danny Duffy pitching six shutout innings in a 4-1 win over the Chicago White Sox.

“No, I didn’t think it would be a home run,” Cuthbert said of what initially appeared to be just deep fly in the third. “I hit it OK. I thought it might be off the wall.”

The Royals stopped their longest slide since an eight-game drought in May 2013.

“It’s big. It was a team effort,” Duffy said.

Kendrys Morales also homered for Kansas City.

“That’s the advantage of hitting homers,” manager Ned Yost said. “You don’t have to bunch three and four hits together.”

The White Sox lost for the 21st time in their last 29 games following back-to-back wins.

Duffy (2-1) struck out 10 and gave up three hits. He made his sixth start since rejoining the Royals’ rotation.

The left-hander was sharp despite battling the 91-degree heat and a mound he described as having a “Grand Canyon” on the rubber and landing spot.

“I tried to shorten my stride and it might have helped me because of how bad the landing spot was,” Duffy said. “It was hot and my legs were struggling and the mound was pretty chewed up.”

Avisail Garcia singled in Chicago’s lone run off reliever Wade Davis with two outs in the ninth.

Jose Quintana (5-7) also struck out 10 in his career-high sixth straight loss. He hasn’t won since May 8 vs. Minnesota when he had a league-leading 1.38 ERA.

Quintana gave up all three homers and walked none in eight innings, but the White Sox provided no offensive support.

“I don’t get it,” third baseman Todd Frazier said. “I don’t understand when we get opportunities we squander them. We’ve just got to figure out a way to get something.”

The Royals hit three solo home runs for the second straight day. They moved ahead of the White Sox by a half-game in the AL Central.

Duffy escaped a second-and-third, one-out jam in the first by striking out Frazier and retiring Brett Lawrie on a lineout.

SOLO FLIGHT

Kansas City’s last eight homers have all been solo shots.

ROOM FOR ROOKIE

Prized White Sox prospect and SS Tim Anderson was back in the lineup and went 0 for 3 after getting two hits in his major league debut on Friday. Manager Robin Ventura said Anderson figures to play “at least five days a week” after making progress at the plate and in the field since spring training.

NEW MIX

Yost used a new-look lineup for a second day following a 7-5 loss to Chicago on Friday night. LF Whit Merrifield led off, with SS Alcides Escobar batting second, 1B Eric Hosmer third and CF Lorenzo Cain fourth.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: RHP Dillon Gee was recalled from Triple-A Omaha and LHP Scott Alexander was optioned to Omaha on Saturday. Yost said the 30-year-old Gee, who has made four starts with the Royals this year, will work out of the bullpen. . OF Brett Eibner (ankle) went 0 for 3 on Friday at Triple-A Omaha in a rehab stint.

White Sox: OF Jason Coats, recalled from Triple-A Charlotte on Friday after CF Austin Jackson was put on the 15-day DL (right meniscus tear) on Friday, was in the lineup as the DH. He went 0 for 2 with a walk.

UP NEXT

Royals: RHP Yordano Ventura (4-4, 5.32) remains active as he appeals a nine-game suspension resulting from a fight with Baltimore’s Manny Machado last Tuesday.

White Sox: LHP Carlos Rodon (2-5, 4.41) takes the mound after being pushed back from a scheduled start last Thursday (sore neck.) Rodon played catch in the outfield before Saturday’s game.

— Associated Press —

Missouri baseball coach Tim Jamieson resigned after 22 seasons

riggertMissouriCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Missouri baseball coach Tim Jamieson has resigned after 698 victories in 22 seasons.

Jamieson coached eight All-Americans and 10 freshman All-Americans. Seventy-five of his players were drafted, with 10 playing in the major leagues. The list includes Max Scherzer, Ian Kinsler, Aaron Crow and Kyle Gibson.

Jamieson was a two-time coach of the year and his 2006 team was the first No. 4 seed to an NCAA regional. Missouri also won the Big Eight in 1996 and the SEC Tournament in 2012 under Jamieson.

The school said Saturday it was exploring the possibility of Jamieson staying in an administrative role while beginning a nationwide search for a new coach.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals win second straight at Pittsburgh

riggertCardinalsPITTSBURGH (AP) — Carlos Martinez came within two outs of his first career complete game and wasn’t upset after falling short.

If he keeps throwing like he did Saturday night, he’ll finish nine innings eventually.

Martinez notched his third consecutive win and Matt Holliday had a three-run homer among his three hits as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 5-1.

The Cardinals won for the sixth time in seven games. Pittsburgh lost its fourth in a row.

Martinez (7-5) gave up one run and six hits in 8 1/3 innings before being lifted when the Pirates put runners on first and second with one out.

“I always want to go out there and do my work for all nine innings,” Martinez said. “That’s why I do all the extra work (between) starts, so I can stay strong and stay out there as long as possible.”

Trevor Rosenthal got two outs for his 12th save in 14 opportunities. He blew a save in the ninth inning Friday night in a game the Cardinals eventually won 9-3 in 12 innings.

“Crazy things happen to us in this park, so when they get it within that kind of distance, and Trevor can come in and shut the door, he’s going to,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said.

Matheny was impressed by Martinez, who threw 122 pitches in his 49th career start. He struck out five, walked three and induced three double-play grounders with a sinker that regularly reached 96 mph.

“It’s freakish to be able to throw that hard with that kind of movement,” Matheny said.

Before starting his winning streak, Martinez lost five straight starts.

“It really hasn’t any big changes,” Martinez said. “I’m just trying to stay focused and make small adjustments.”

Holliday’s 10th home run capped a four-run fifth inning against Francisco Liriano (4-6), who lost to the Cardinals for the just the third time in 10 decisions, and made it 4-0.

Holliday wanted to talk more about Martinez’s outing than his own hitting feats.

“He was still throwing 96 mph in the ninth inning with over 100 pitches and he has two plus breaking pitches,” Holliday said. “He’s got top two, top three stuff in the league. He’s got Cy Young-caliber stuff.”

Brandon Moss led off the fifth with a double, advanced to third on a wild pitch and scored when Jedd Gyorko struck out but reached first base on Chris Stewart’s passed ball. Two outs later, Aledmys Diaz walked and Holliday followed with a drive to right-center field.

“(Liriano) was pitching really well and he gives us fits,” Holliday said. “For us to get him for a four spot, obviously with the way Carlos was pitching, we felt pretty good at that point.

Moss had his fifth straight multihit game.

Liriano was pitching on extra rest as he started for the first time since June 3 but still fell to 1-5 in his last six outings. The left-hander gave up four runs — three unearned — and four hits in six innings with eight strikeouts and three walks.

“He was good in a lot of different places,” Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said. “He repeated the delivery really well. Stayed on line throughout the delivery really well. Had a good mix of pitches throughout the game.”

Starling Marte had three hits and is 14 for 34 (.412) against the Cardinals this season.

Jhonny Peralta’s RBI single in the seventh extended the Cardinals’ lead to 5-0. The Pirates got their run in the bottom half when Gregory Polanco doubled and scored on Josh Harrison’s sacrifice fly.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Pirates: C Francisco Cervelli was put on the 15-day disabled list after undergoing surgery to repair a broken bone in his left hand. He is expected to be sidelined four to six weeks. Stewart is likely to get the bulk of the playing time behind the plate, though he left the game in the seventh inning with left ankle discomfort. … RHP Gerrit Cole (strained right triceps) underwent an MRI exam on Saturday after leaving Friday night in the third inning. The Pirates expect to receive the results Sunday.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Mike Leake (4-4, 4.22 ERA) is scheduled to start Sunday in the finale of the three-game series. He is 7-1 in his last 16 starts at Pittsburgh, dating to Sept. 11, 2012.

Pirates: LHP Jon Niese (6-2, 3.95) is 3-0 with a 1.74 ERA in his last five starts. He pitched seven shutout innings in his previous outing Tuesday to beat the New York Mets.

— Associated Press —

Royals skid reaches eight as they come up short at Chicago

riggertRoyalsCHICAGO (AP) — Alex Avila hit two of Chicago’s season-high four home runs and the struggling White Sox beat Kansas City 7-5 on Friday night to give a shaky Chris Sale his major league-leading 10th win and the Royals their eight straight loss.

The defending champions matched their longest losing streak since May 2013, while the White Sox opened the weekend series with their second straight win after dropping 20 of 26.

Sale (10-2) pitched into the seventh and got the victory despite giving up a season-high three home runs — two solo drives to Eric Hosmer and one to Salvador Perez. But the White Sox also used the long ball to come out on top after beating Washington the previous night.

Avila came through with his first two homers since signing with Chicago in the offseason. He hit back-to-back solo drives with Brett Lawrie in the fourth and added a two-run shot in the sixth off Ian Kennedy (4-5) to make it 7-3.

Melky Cabrera also homered for Chicago.

Top prospect Tim Anderson added two hits for Chicago in his major league debut, including a double in his first at-bat, and scored a run. The promising shortstop was called up before the game to replace veteran Jimmy Rollins, who was designated for assignment.

Those moves came a day after the White Sox let pitcher Mat Latos go and signed former AL MVP Justin Morneau — and less than a week after they acquired starter James Shields from San Diego.

Sale got the win after going 0-2 in his previous three starts even though he gave up 11 hits. He struck out eight and walked one.

Sale exited with a 7-4 lead and runners on first and third after Alcides Escobar’s RBI single with none out in the seventh. Hosmer added a sacrifice fly off Dan Jennings in the inning to make it a two-run game. But the White Sox hung on, with David Robertson working the ninth for his 15th save in 17 tries.

Kennedy lasted 5 2/3 innings, allowing seven runs and nine hits. The right-hander gave up a career-high four homers and dropped to 0-3 in his past six outings.

TRAINER’S ROOM

White Sox: General manager Rick Hahn said CF Austin Jackson will likely miss at least six weeks because of a medial meniscus tear in his left knee and have surgery next week. Jackson hurt his knee stepping on a base awkwardly during Thursday’s win over Washington. He remained in the game, but an MRI on Friday confirmed the injury. With Jackson on the 15-day DL, Chicago recalled outfielder Jason Coats from Triple-A. … Hahn also said pitchers Jake Petricka (torn labrum in hip) and Daniel Webb (Tommy John elbow surgery) had season-ending operations on Friday.

UP NEXT

LHP Jose Quintana (5-6, 2.58 ERA) looks to get back to winning for Chicago after dropping five consecutive starts, while the Royals are pushing Chris Young back in the rotation and going with LHP Danny Duffy (1-1, 3.35) instead.

— Associated Press —

Wainwright’s pinch-hit double leads St. Louis past Pirates in 12 innings

riggertCardinalsPITTSBURGH (AP) — Pitcher Adam Wainwright, pinch-hitting because the Cardinals were out of position players, hit a two-run, two-out double to spark a six-run 12th inning as St. Louis beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 9-3 on Friday night.

Wainwright batted for reliever Jonathan Broxton after Matt Carpenter drew a two-out walk from Juan Nicasio and Pirates manager Clint Hurdle decided to intentionally walk Alemdys Diaz to bring up Broxton’s spot in the order.

Wainwright followed with a drive to the gap in left-center to score both runners. He is hitting .261 this season, going 6 for 23 with four doubles, one triple and one home run.

The Cardinals added four more runs in the inning. Matt Adams hit an RBI double to extend his hitting streak to 10 games and scored on Jhonny Peralta’s single before Brandon Moss’ two-run homer, his 14th, capped the outburst.

Broxton (1-0) pitched two scoreless innings as the Cardinals (33-28) won for the fifth time in six games, moved a season-high five games over .500 and snapped a second-place tie with the Pirates in the NL Central. St. Louis, though, trails the first-place Cubs by nine games.

Nicasio (5-5) was charged with six runs in one inning after beating the New York Mets in the second game of a doubleheader Tuesday when he allowed one run in five innings as a starter.

The Pirates scored a run off Cardinals closer Trevor Rosenthal in the bottom of the ninth to tie the score 3-3 when Starling Marte hit a leadoff triple and scored on Jordy Mercer’s one-out single.

The Cardinals went ahead 3-2 in the eighth inning on Carpenter’s three-run home run, his 10th, off Neftali Feliz. They had been blanked on two hits through the first seven innings.

Carpenter had two hits to run his hitting streak to seven games. Peralta and Moss also had two hits.

Marte had two hits for the Pirates, who scored their first two runs on Josh Harrison’s force out grounder in the third inning and John Jaso’s single in the fifth.

St. Louis’ Michael Wacha pitched well but remained winless in nine starts since April 23 when Rosenthal blew the save. Wacha’s personal losing streak remained at six games though he gave up two runs and three hits while striking out five and walking three.

Pirates starting pitcher Gerrit Cole left in the third inning with right triceps tightness. Catcher Francisco Cervelli left in the next inning with a sore left hand.

Cole was removed after giving up a leadoff single to Carpenter. He was relieved by AJ Schugel after not allowing a run in two-plus innings. Cole gave up two hits and one walk while walking three.

Schugel pitched four perfect innings and struck out four.

Cervelli left after swinging at the first pitch of his at-bat. Chris Stewart pinch-hit and remained in the game at catcher.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: Carpenter (jammed finger on right hand) returned after leaving a 3-2 win at Cincinnati on Thursday night in the eighth inning . RHP Lance Lynn, who underwent Tommy John elbow ligament transplant surgery in November, is expected to be examined by the team’s medical staff later this month in St. Louis and also throw in front of the coaching staff.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Carlos Martinez (6-5, 3.76 ERA) will start Saturday night in the second game of the three-game series. Martinez has won consecutive starts after losing his previous five.

Pirates: LHP Francisco Liriano (4-5, 5.25) is 7-2 with a 2.41 ERA against the Cardinals in 14 career starts.

— Associated Press —

Mizzou’s Ryan Howard selected in fifth round of MLB Draft by Giants

riggertMissouriCOLUMBIA, Mo. – Mizzou Baseball junior SS Ryan Howard (St. Charles, Mo.) was selected in the fifth round (No. 155 overall) of the 2016 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft by the San Francisco Giants on Friday (June 10). Howard is the first Mizzou player off the board in this year’s draft and he is the highest drafted position player at Mizzou since James Boone went in the third round in 2005.

Howard is coming off of a junior season in which he hit .295 with 13 doubles, five homers and a triple while driving in 27 runs and scoring 40 more. He was outstanding over his final 16 games of the season, hitting a team-best .381 with 13 runs and nine RBIs while hitting five of his 13 doubles and two of his five homers in that span, raising his average from .259 to .295. He also had eight of his 19 multi-hit games in that 16-game span.

A Francis Howell Central graduate, Howard has hit .284 in 163 career games played at Mizzou, starting all but three of those contests. He has been Mizzou’s starting shortstop since 2015 and has slugged 46 extra-base hits in his career while driving in 86 runs over three seasons. He spent last summer with USA Baseball’s Collegiate National Team as the starting shortstop and was a preseason All-SEC First Team pick at shortstop by the league’s coaches.

This is the second time that Howard has been drafted by the San Francisco Giants after being taken in the 31st round a year ago. The draft will conclude tomorrow with the remaining rounds.

— Mizzou Athletics —

St. Joseph extends win streak to four with 4-2 victory over Joplin

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs earned their fourth consecutive win Thursday night as they were able to defeat Joplin 4-2 inside Phil Welch Stadium.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team improves to 7-2 and 5-2 in the MINK League, while Joplin falls to 4-2 with both losses comes to the Mustangs.

St. Joseph broke a scoreless tie in the fourth inning with RBI singles from Trent Hill and Brady Anderson.  Joplin answered back in the sixth with two runs of their own to tie the game.

The game remained tied until the bottom of the seventh inning when Hill drove in Dave Casciola to give the Mustangs the lead back and then Kyle Uhrich knocked in Hill with an RBI single.

Hill, Casciola and Evan McDonald each had two hits each.

John Milan earned the win in relief and he threw 1.2 scoreless innings.  George Brandecker started the game and allowed two runs in 5.1 innings.  He struck out eight and walked three.

Steve D’Amico picked up his first save of the season as he threw a scorless ninth inning with two strickouts.

St. Joseph is off on Friday and they’re back at Phil Welch Stadium Saturday to play a team of Mustangs Alumni.  The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m.

Missouri Western women adds Arkansas-Fort Smith transfer Dana Lewis

MWSUST. JOSEPH. – Missouri Western Women’s Basketball head coach Rob Edmisson has announced the signings of Dana Lewis to a national letter of intent for the 2016-17 season.

Lewis will transfer to Missouri Wetern from the University of Arkansas Fort-Smith where she played one season. Lewis joins Savannah Lentz, Trudy Peterson and Erin Anderson as signees for the upcoming 2016-17 season.

Dana Lewis | 6-0 | F | Las Vegas, Nev. | Arkansas-Fort Smith
Lewis played in 30 games with seven starts last season at Arkasnas Fort-Smith after trasferring from Grand Canyon University. At UAFS, Lewis averaged 4.1 points, 3.7 rebounds per game and 16.2 minutes per game. In her senior year at Arbor View High School, Lewis averaged 10.7 points, 8.3 rebounds and 1.2 steals per game.

“We’re very excited to add Dana to our team for next season,” head coach Rob Edmisson said. “She has great size and the ability to provide us some depth in the post.”

Missouri Western is coming off of a memorable season that saw the team claim its first MIAA Regular Season Championship since 2002 and first NCAA Regional appearance since 2004. Edmisson’s Griffons said an MIAA record with 20 conference wins.

— MWSU Athletics —

Molina’s single allows Cards to take another series from Cincinnati

riggertCardinalsCINCINNATI (AP) — A little vintage Adam Wainwright and another booed hit by Yadier Molina have the St. Louis Cardinals headed up.

Wainwright allowed only two hits in six innings, and Molina’s bases-loaded single snapped a tie in the eighth on Thursday night, sending the St. Louis Cardinals to a 3-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds 3-2 and yet another series win in their lopsided NL Central rivalry.

Molina’s third hit of the game led St. Louis to its fourth victory in five games. The Cardinals (32-28) are a season-high four games over .500, tied with the Pirates for second place, 10 games behind the Cubs.

St. Louis took two of three and has won 18 of its last 22 series with Cincinnati.

Wainwright’s slow start to the season was a part of the Cardinals’ struggles. He’s gotten his fastball back and has thrown five straight quality starts, with this one the best yet.

“It’s been building toward that,” Wainwright said. “That’s me out there. That’s exactly how I pitch.”

The Cardinal who gets booed the loudest in Cincinnati was in the middle of another comeback. His one-out single off Ross Ohlendorf (4-5) put St. Louis up 3-2 and drew jeers. Molina has been booed regularly at Great American Ball Park since a brawl that started between him and Brandon Phillips in 2010.

“Yadi’s been a Reds killer for years and years and years,” Wainwright said. “He’s the guy you want up there in the big spot.”

Molina also doubled and scored a run in the second inning, getting booed that time, too.

“Lately I’m feeling better,” said Molina, who came in batting .261.

Seung Hwan Oh (2-0) pitched one inning in relief of Wainwright, who was lifted for a pinch-hitter in the seventh with two runners aboard and the score tied. Trevor Rosenthal retired the side in the ninth for his 11th save in 12 chances.

Matt Carpenter scored twice, including the go-ahead run after opening the eighth inning with a double.

Wainwright had a rough first inning, giving up Jay Bruce’s RBI groundout and Adam Duvall’s run-scoring single. He didn’t allow another hit before leaving in the seventh. Wainwright fanned a season-high nine.

Wainwright hasn’t had much success against the Reds. Coming into the game, he was 8-10 in 24 games against Cincinnati with a 4.51 ERA, his highest against any team except the Mets.

Molina doubled off Brandon Finnegan and scored on Brandon Moss’ single in the second inning. The Cardinals tied it with the help of a balk in the sixth. Carpenter walked, moved up on Finnegan’s balk on a throw to first base, and then came around on Aledmys Diaz’s single.

“Big call,” Reds manager Bryan Price said of the balk. “It didn’t look different to me from the naked eye. I’m not saying it wasn’t a balk, but I didn’t see it.”

MATHENY FUMES

With Cincinnati’s Tyler Holt on first base in the bottom of the eighth and one out, Ivan DeJesus, Jr. hit a fly to shallow right. Stephen Piscotty dived and appeared to catch the ball, but got to his knees and threw to second for what would have been a forceout in case the umpires ruled he trapped the ball.

Umpire Sean Barber called it a catch, but a review determined Piscotty trapped the ball and Holt was awarded second base. Manager Mike Matheny contended Holt would have been forced out and shouldn’t be awarded the base.

“It’s a joke,” Matheny said. “I can’t think of any rational reason that would be true in that situation. It just didn’t make sense.”

STATS

It was Wainwright’s 300th appearance, matching Steve Kline for 16th on the Cardinals career list. … Matt Adams pinch-hit in the ninth and singled, extending his hitting streak to nine games. … Brandon Phillips’ first-inning double extended his hitting streak to 12 games, the longest on the Reds this season.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: Moss, who had two homers Wednesday night, started at 1B instead of Adams. Moss is 4 for 8 in his career off Finnegan with a homer.

Reds: CF Billy Hamilton was in the concussion protocol after being hit in the head while sliding into third base Wednesday night.

UP NEXT:

Cardinals: Michael Wacha (2-6) tries to snap the longest losing streak of his career in Pittsburgh. He’s lost six straight decisions since April 28. The last Cardinals pitcher to lose seven straight decisions was Kip Wells in 2007.

Reds: RHP Anthony DeSclafani makes his first start of the season after recovering from a strained oblique suffered during spring training. He’ll open a series against Oakland.

— Associated Press —

Royals’ Ventura suspended 9 games after hitting Machado

riggertRoyalsNEW YORK (AP) — Kansas City pitcher Yordano Ventura was suspended nine games and Baltimore third baseman Manny Machado was penalized four games Thursday after their brawl earlier this week.

Major League Baseball also fined each player an undisclosed amount.

This is the second straight season Ventura has been suspended — he drew a seven-game ban last year after an altercation with the White Sox.

“It’s just kind of tough when you have to play short because of something that someone else kind of got going,” Orioles manager Buck Showalter said before Thursday night’s game at Toronto.

On Tuesday night in Baltimore, Ventura hit Machado in the back with a 99 mph fastball in the fifth inning. Machado charged the mound and punched Ventura in the head as the benches emptied.

Ventura and Machado both have appealed their suspensions. They can continue to play until the process is complete.

“They came up with a decision and obviously I’m going to appeal it,” Machado said. “We’ll see what happens.”

Machado was in the starting lineup Thursday night against the Blue Jays.

Showalter said he doesn’t expect Machado’s appeal to be heard while Baltimore is in Toronto for a four-game series.

No matter what happens, Showalter said it will be difficult to cope without Machado, who is batting .303 with 15 homers and 37 RBIs.

Baltimore is already minus shortstop J.J. Hardy, who has been sidelined since May 1 with a broken left foot.

This is the second career suspension for Machado, who sat out five games in 2014 after throwing his bat toward third base following an inside pitch from Oakland’s Fernando Abad. Machado appealed that suspension but the penalty was upheld.

The Royals next play Friday night in Chicago against the White Sox.

The trouble between Ventura and Machado started earlier in the game. Machado got brushed back by two fastballs, then flied out and had words with Ventura.

The next time up, Machado was hit.

After the game, Orioles star Adam Jones said he was glad Machado defended himself and said he would pay any fine.

“Tonight, Manny handled it himself and I couldn’t be happier for him,” Jones said then. “I knew it was going to happen. (Ventura) has electric stuff and the talent is all there, but between the ears, there is a circuit board off balance. I don’t get it. I don’t get it.”

A talented hard thrower who can be temperamental, Ventura got into skirmishes with the Angels and the Athletics early last season before his dustup with the White Sox led to a suspension.

— Associated Press —

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