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Mustangs roll to 10-3 win at Clarinda Monday

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs suffered their worst loss in franchise history Sunday at Nevada, but they bounced back with a 10-3 win at Clarinda Monday night.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team improves to 4-2 this season and 3-2 in the MINK League.

No stats were made available Monday night but Logan Jacik earned the win for the Mustangs, while Brady Anderson drove in three runs.  Matt Wollnik and Jacob Richardson added two RBI each.

St. Joseph returns home Tuesday as they host the Kansas City Bankers in the non-league game at Phil Welch Stadium.  The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m.

KC drops fifth straight game as they lose series opener at Baltimore

riggertRoyalsBALTIMORE (AP) — The Baltimore Orioles’ latest comeback victory featured an intriguing subplot involving a rookie who made the most of his second chance.

Mark Trumbo and Matt Wieters hit solo homers in the seventh inning to back a sparkling pitching performance by Mike Wright, and the Orioles beat Kansas City 4-1 Monday night to extend the Royals’ losing streak to five games.

Manny Machado also homered for the Orioles, who have won five of six — all in come-from-behind fashion.

Wright (3-3) allowed one run and five hits over seven innings, striking out four and walking two. Just five days earlier, the right-hander gave up four home runs in 2 2/3 innings against Boston and was optioned to the minor leagues less than 24 hours later. But he was recalled the next day when reliever Darren O’Day was placed on the disabled list.

The 6-foot-6 Wright was inserted back into the rotation for this game. Given a “do-over” — as manager Buck Showalter labeled it — he shut down the defending World Series champions over seven gritty innings.

“He came out here with a vengeance,” Machado said.

Wright said: “When you get sent down and recalled the next day, I mean, you’ve got to come out and perform. So I definitely had a little more focus and, like he said, a vengeance.”

Wright and Kansas City left-hander Danny Duffy were locked in a scoreless duel until the Royals pushed across an unearned run in the seventh.

Trumbo led off the bottom half with his 19th home run, and Wieters connected with one out to chase Duffy (1-1). Adam Jones capped the uprising with an RBI double.

And so, as they did twice against Boston and two times against the Yankees within the span of a week, the Orioles turned a deficit into a victory.

“Everybody contributes and everybody steps it up,” second baseman Jonathan Schoop said.

Machado homered off Kelvin Herrera in the eighth after striking out three times against Duffy.

Brad Brach struck out the side in the eighth and Zach Britton got three straight outs for his 18th save.

Duffy gave up five hits and matched his career high with nine strikeouts. The first six innings he pitched were marvelous; after that, not so much.

“I felt really, really good. Shame it had to go down like that,” Duffy said. “But I gave it my all for sure. I made a couple mistakes.”

The Royals’ second five-game skid of the season followed a six-game winning streak.

“Our guys are really good at picking themselves up,” manager Ned Yost said. “You understand that you’re going to go through these things.”

Paulo Orlando and Cheslor Cuthbert hit singles in the Kansas City seventh before Jarrod Dyson chopped a grounder to Machado at shortstop. After Schoop got the force out at second base, he changed his mind about throwing to first and tried a pump-fake, hoping to fool Orlando at third. But Schoop released the ball, which bounced off the right elbow of the sliding Cuthbert and rolled away, allowing Orlando to score.

Cuthbert left with a bruised elbow.

“Everything is going to be OK, it just hit my crazy bone,” Cuthbert said.

Earlier, Duffy took a line drive off his left calf but stayed in the game.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Kris Medlen (shoulder) threw batting practice in Arizona “and everything went great,” Yost said. The right-hander will do it again Tuesday in preparation for a rehab assignment. … OF Brett Eibner (ankle) took batting practice with the team. … OF Alex Gordon (wrist) is improving to the point where he can begin to catch and throw, Yost said.

Orioles: RHP Yovani Gallardo (shoulder) will make his second rehab start Tuesday, this time with Triple-A Norfolk. If all goes well, he could be activated Sunday in Toronto. … SS J.J. Hardy (broken left foot) took 25 grounders in Florida. He’s still weeks from returning to action.

UP NEXT

Royals: Yordano Ventura (4-3, 4.82 ERA) pitches the second game of the series Tuesday night. He’s 4-1 with a 1.91 ERA in five career starts against Baltimore.

Orioles: Ubaldo Jimenez (2-6, 6.59) seeks to strengthen his shaky spot in the rotation after going 0-3 with 16 walks and a 9.97 ERA in his last five starts.

— Associated Press —

Northwest Missouri State tennis finishes 12th in final ITA poll

Northwest2013riggertSKILLMAN, N.J. – The Northwest Missouri State University men’s tennis team was ranked No. 12 in the final Oracle/Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) Division II national team rankings. The Bearcat men finished No. 1 in the Central Region and the Northwest women were No. 6 in the region rankings.

For the men, Romain Boissinot was No. 2 in the region in singles and No. 38 nationally, up from the previous rank of No. 42. In doubles, Alvaro Riveros and Sergi Fontcuberta finished the year as the region’s top ranked doubles team and moved up to No. 15 in the nation. Fontcuberta was ranked No. 11 in singles in the region and Riveros was No. 15 in the region.

Lorena Rivas Jarolim finished the season ranked No. 20 in the central region in singles play.

Northwest’s men captured the completed the seventh-straight regular season and tournament title sweep, going 21-4 overall and advancing to the program’s second NCAA quarterfinal round. The Bearcat women went 12-13 overall, earning the team’s second straight NCAA Tournament bid.

— Northwest Athletics —

Missouri swimmer Darragh qualifies for Rio Olympics

riggertMissouriOTTAWA, Canada – Mizzou senior swimmer Mack Darragh (Ontario, Canada) punched his ticket to the 2016 Rio Olympics, as announced on June 6 by Federation International De Natation (FINA) on Monday. Darragh qualifies as part of the 4x100m medley relay team for the Olympic Games based off of the fastest times in the world from the qualifying period of March 1, 2015 to May 31, 2016. Darragh won his event at the Canadian Olympic & Para-Swimming Trials in April, but missed the individual qualifying standards. The medley relay qualification was his final opportunity to earn an Olympic berth.

Darragh, 22, won the 100m butterfly at Trials. He also took the 200m butterfly and earned a bronze medal in the 200m IM. This is the second senior national team for Darragh, who competed at the 2014 Pan Pacific Championships in Gold Coast, Australia. He was also a bronze medalist at the 2011 FINA World Junior Swimming Championships in the 200-m butterfly. At the 2015 NCAA Division I Championships, he established Mizzou records in the 200-yard butterfly and 200-yard IM.

This will be the first Olympic Games for Darragh.

— Mizzou Athletics —

St. Joseph gets shutout at Nevada 14-0

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs suffered their worst loss in franchise history Sunday night as they lost at Nevada 14-0.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team drops to 3-2 this season and 2-2 in the MINK League.

Nevada broke open a scoreless game in the second inning as they scored seven two-out runs and sent 12 men to the plate.  The Griffons added four more two-out runs in the third inning and led 11-0 and three.

Jacob Hurst stared for St. Joseph but didn’t make it out of the second inning.  He lasted just 1.2 innings and allowed seven runs on four hits.  He struck out two and walked four.

The Mustangs used four pitchers and they combined to walk 13 batters and hit three others.

St. Joe had only four hits on the night and didn’t have a hit after the third inning until Matt Wollnik singled in ninth.  Brett Marr, Davey Casciola and Kyle Unrich also had singles in the game.

The Mustangs are back on the road Monday as they play at Clarinda.  The first pitch is set for 7:00 p.m. from Municipal Stadium.

Royals suffer four-game sweep in Cleveland

riggertRoyalsCLEVELAND (AP) — The wait was worth it for the Cleveland Indians on Sunday.

“It ended up being a good day, other than it was long,” manager Terry Francona said after his team completed a four-game sweep of the World Series champion Kansas City Royals with a rain-delayed 7-0 victory. “It’s a heck of a lot better when you’re up than when you’re down.”

Francisco Lindor hit one of Cleveland’s four solo homers and drove in three runs. Corey Kluber (5-6) allowed two hits and was pulled after six innings when the game was delayed by inclement weather for 3 hours, 10 minutes.

Lindor, Carlos Santana and rookie Tyler Naquin homered in the fifth. Mike Napoli connected in the fourth.

The Indians moved past the Royals into first place in the AL Central on Saturday. Cleveland has won five straight overall and six of seven against Kansas City this season.

“They were ahead of us,” Napoli said. “You want to win the series, but we put ourselves in a position to sweep. We had a good day today.”

Cleveland swept four games from the Royals for the first time since Aug. 11-14, 2006. The Indians are 18-11 against the AL Central this season.

The game was stopped after Kluber retired the side in the sixth. Heavy rain began to fall at 2:41 p.m. and lasted about an hour. The tarp remained on the field because more rain was expected, but showers didn’t return until around 5 p.m. and fell heavily for about 30 minutes. The game finally resumed at 5:51 p.m.

Kluber, who gave up both hits in the first, struck out six and retired 13 of the final 14 batters he faced.

“Obviously, you’d like to keep going when you’re feeling good,” he said. “You pitch the situation to the game. I’m not trying to get innings any quicker because the weather is coming up.”

Chris Young (2-6) allowed all four home runs in his first start since May 9. The Royals managed three hits off three Cleveland pitchers.

Kansas City came into the series with a six-game winning streak, but lost the opener when Cleveland scored two runs in the ninth. The Royals were outscored 20-2 in the final three games.

“It’s one of those weekends,” manager Ned Yost said. “We’re coming off an undefeated homestand where we pitched great. We just didn’t play well here.”

Naquin, who has homered in three straight games, led off the fifth with a drive that landed in the second deck in right field. Santana homered with one out, and Lindor’s home run came with two outs.

Lindor had a sacrifice fly in the first and an RBI single in the seventh.

The Indians hit four home runs in a game for the first time this season. Cleveland last hit three homers in an inning on July 29, 2015.

STRONG FINISH

The Indians began the homestand by losing two of three to Baltimore and Texas. Outfielder Marlon Byrd was suspended 162 games Wednesday for testing positive for performance-enhancing drugs.

The Indians regrouped to win the final five games before starting a 10-game trip in Seattle on Monday.

“I don’t look back very far,” Francona said. “The last game is a hard game to win. Now we turn the page really quick, but the more you win, the more fun and interesting the next game gets.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: OF Brett Eibner (sprained left ankle) took part in running and agility drills in the outfield Sunday morning. He was injured Tuesday and placed on the 15-day disabled list the following day.

Indians: RHP Joba Chamberlain (left intercostal strain) will be activated from the 15-day DL prior to Monday’s game in Seattle.

UP NEXT

Royals: LHP Danny Duffy (1-0) makes his fifth start and 21st appearance in the opener of a three-game series at Baltimore.

Indians: RHP Trevor Bauer (3-2) is winless in five career appearances against Seattle, where Cleveland opens a four-game series.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis rallies past San Francisco again

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — For the second straight day, the St. Louis Cardinals rallied against the hottest team in the majors.

Aledmys Diaz, Matt Adams and Yadier Molina each had an RBI during a four-run sixth inning and the Cardinals beat the San Francisco Giants 6-3 on Sunday night.

“We never feel like we’re out of it and tonight was a good example,” said leadoff man Matt Carpenter, who had three hits and an RBI. “We can score a bunch of runs and we can do it in a lot of different ways.”

Editor’s Picks

Matt Carpenter helps the Cardinals grind out a tough series

Matt Carpenter has been the spark recently in the Cardinals’ offense and his sixth-inning double helped key a St. Louis comeback.

On Saturday, they homered four times in nine at-bats and scored seven straight runs in a 7-4 victory. This time it was three hits, a walk, a hit batter and an error.

Starter Carlos Martinez said he stayed in the dugout after being taken out so he’d have a good view of the comeback.

“I feel I did a really good job of staying in the game and getting out of situations,” Martinez said through an interpreter. “I’m always positive.”

Carpenter is batting .429 (15 for 35) with eight extra-base hits since returning from paternity leave.

“This game’s such a game of ups and downs and flows and hot streaks and cold streaks,” Carpenter said. “I’m going through a stretch right now where I’m seeing the ball good.”

The tiebreaking run came on an RBI fielder’s choice with the bases loaded by Molina, who entered the at-bat in an 0-for-20 skid. Shortstop Brandon Crawford made an error on the play when he dropped the ball on the exchange trying to flip to second to start a double play.

Jarrett Parker hit a two-run homer for the NL West-leading Giants, who have lost two straight for the first time since May 8-10 when they dropped three in a row. Despite dropping the weekend series, the Giants are a major league-best 18-6 since May 11.

Martinez (6-5) allowed three runs in six innings and Trevor Rosenthal earned his 10th save in 11 chances.

Giants manager Bruce Bochy used three relievers in the sixth trying to preserve the lead for Jake Peavy (2-6), who missed a chance at his 150th career victory.

“I was going to use my guys to try and stop it there,” Bochy said. “I thought that was the ballgame. They did a good piece of hitting that inning.”

Peavy allowed four runs in five innings. His next shot at No. 150 will be next Sunday, due to off days that will mean extra rest for all of the pitchers.

“It just stinks that we couldn’t find a way to stop the bleeding,” Peavy said. “I certainly didn’t and things obviously didn’t get any better after I left, unfortunately.”

Parker, who started all three games in the series in place of injured Hunter Pence, snapped a 2-for-19 slump with his second homer in the fourth for a 2-1 lead. A hit, walk and run-scoring groundout by Crawford made it 3-1 in the sixth.

WILD STATS

Martinez threw three wild pitches after entering with three on the year.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Giants: Hunter Pence (hamstring) will undergo surgery Thursday in Dallas and is expected to miss eight weeks. … Matt Cain (hamstring) threw a second bullpen session Sunday and is likely to throw a simulated game Wednesday.

Cardinals: SS Jhonny Peralta (thumb) returned to St. Louis after going 0 for 4 and playing 3B for Class A Palm Beach and is expected to be activated off the 15-day DL on Tuesday. Peralta will play 3B due to the emergence of Diaz.

REST TIME

Giants C Buster Posey got a routine day off. He’s in a 2-for-24 slump.

UP NEXT

Giants: Albert Suarez (1-1, 3.18) makes his second career start Tuesday in the opener of a two-game series against the Red Sox. He’s filling in for Cain.

Cardinals: Mike Leake (4-4, 3.82) makes his first career appearance against the Reds on Tuesday to start a six-game trip. He’s 4-1 with a 1.59 ERA his last five outings.

— Associated Press —

Mustangs blank Joplin behind Lydon-Lorson’s complete game

riggertMustangsThe St. Joseph Mustangs bounced back from their first loss of the season to defeat Joplin Saturday night 2-0 inside Phil Welch Stadium.

St. Joe’s summer college baseball team is now 3-1 and 2-1 in the MINK League.

Mustangs’ starter Michael Lydon-Lorson was the story of the game as he threw a complete game two-hit shutout.  He struck out four and didn’t walk a batter.

St. Joseph took a 1-0 lead in the fifth inning as Tyler Cox had an RBI single.  Then in the seventh after a leadoff triple by Brett Marr, Trent Hill drove him in with a single.

Marr led the Mustangs’ offense as he finished 3-for-3 and he scored both runs.  Hill and Jacob Richardson added two hits each.

St. Joe will be on the road for the first time this season on Sunday as they travel to Nevada.  The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m. and will be broadcast on 680 KFEQ AM.

Royals fall out of first place with third consecutive loss to Indians

riggertRoyalsCLEVELAND (AP) — Francisco Lindor hit two doubles and one of Cleveland’s three home runs, leading the Indians into first place in the AL Central with a 7-1 win over the Kansas City Royals on Saturday night.

The Indians will go for a sweep of the four-game series Sunday, and have won five of six against the Royals this season.

Lindor, whose two-run homer came in the seventh inning, became the first Indians player to record three extra-base hits in a game this season. He also started an outstanding defensive play in the ninth. Playing in a shift near second base, he made a backhand stop of Kendrys Morales’ hard-hit grounder and flipped to third baseman Jose Ramirez, who was playing behind second. Ramirez threw to first for the out.

Tyler Naquin, who hit his first big league home run Friday, hit a two-run homer in the sixth. Mike Napoli started the four-run inning with a solo homer.

Josh Tomlin (8-1) bounced back from his first loss of the season and allowed one run in 6 1/3 innings.

Napoli belted his 13th homer of the season into the left-field bleachers with one out in the sixth off Ian Kennedy (4-4). Rajai Davis added an RBI single before Naquin’s homer carried into the seats in right-center.

Tomlin, who lost to Texas on Monday, was pulled after Rey Fuentes’ RBI single. Tomlin gave up seven hits and struck out four.

Royals catcher Salvador Perez returned to the lineup after missing six games with a bruised left thigh. He had two hits off Tomlin and is 13 for 20 in his career against him.

Kennedy allowed five runs in six innings for Kansas City, which had won six straight overall entering the series.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: RHP Kris Medlen (rotator cuff inflammation) will throw to batters Monday at the team’s training facility in Surprise, Arizona. He has been on the 15-day disabled list since May 11.

Indians: RHP Joba Chamberlain (left intercostal strain) could be activated from the 15-day disabled list early in the week. He threw a 20-pitch simulated game Saturday.

UP NEXT

Royals: RHP Chris Young (2-5) makes his first start since May 9. He has made two relief appearances since coming off the 15-day disabled list with a sore forearm May 28.

Indians: RHP Corey Kluber (4-6) allowed six runs, including two homers, in seven innings Monday when he lost to Texas. He’s 5-5 in 14 career starts against Kansas City.

— Associated Press —

Diaz touches off home run barrage, St. Louis beats Giants

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Aledmys Diaz got the green light on 3-0. It was no big surprise, considering how much the rookie has meant to the St. Louis Cardinals.

Diaz lined a tying, three-run shot off the foul pole in the fifth inning, one of four homers in a span of nine at-bats against Jeff Samardzija, and the Cardinals rallied past the San Francisco Giants 7-4 on Saturday night.

“I just knew it was pretty close and I kept running,” Diaz said. “I looked at the umpire and he said, `fair ball,’ so that’s good.”

Brandon Moss got the long-ball binge started with his 11th leading off the fifth. Stephen Piscotty and Matt Adams hit consecutive homers in a matter of three pitches to open the sixth for a 6-4 cushion.

The 25-year-old Diaz got the starting shortstop job after Ruben Tejada was injured at the end of spring training and will stay there when Jhonny Peralta returns next week. He’s batting .324 with eight homers, 29 RBI.

“It’s not just a one-size-fits-all when you get to a 3-0 green light,” manager Mike Matheny said. “It didn’t look like he tried to do too much, because at times you’ll see a 400-foot shot pulled foul when a guy gets too big on an advantage count.”

The rally rescued Michael Wacha, who left trailing 4-0 after five seemingly on track for a seventh consecutive loss. Wacha has allowed 23 earned runs in his last 23 innings.

“I had a good feel for it,” Wacha said. “I just gave up some untimely doubles and triples, but overall I know I’ve just got to trust the process.”

Samardzija (7-4) had given up five homers in 80 innings all season, and just one in his previous five outings. He opened with four routine innings, permitting three singles and no runner past first base.

“You’ve got a four-run lead there, you’ve got to make it stick,” Samardzija said. “So, that hurts.”

Manager Bruce Bochy said Samardzija, who allowed 29 homers season last season to lead the American League, simply lost command.

“He was cruising there,” Bochy said. “Balls started drifting toward the center of the plate.”

Tyler Lyons (2-0), Seung Hwan Oh and Kevin Siegrist each worked a hitless inning before Trevor Rosenthal set the side down in order in the ninth for his ninth save in 10 chances.

Diaz was sitting on a 3-0 pitch for his eighth homer that banged off the foul pole just below the third deck in left, a drive estimated at 426 feet. Piscotty and Adams have seven homers apiece.

“A lot of things happened there, guys keeping it moving,” Matheny said. “Just a great at-bat. Diaz continues to impress us.”

Joe Panik doubled twice with an RBI, Brandon Crawford doubled and tripled and Samardzija had an RBI single for the NL West-leading Giants, who are 18-5 in their last 23 games.

“You’re going to have games like that,” Crawford said. “It did happen pretty fast, though.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Giants: Matt Cain (hamstring) is scheduled to throw his second bullpen session Sunday. If all goes well, he could throw a simulated game Wednesday that could be the final test before returning to the rotation. Cain threw 20 pitches off a mound on Friday.

Cardinals: Peralta (thumb) remains on track to be activated from the DL on Tuesday. He started Saturday for Class A Palm Beach, but will likely primarily play at 3B when he returns due to the emergence of Diaz.

GET A HIT

Wacha had been 0 for 19 with 10 strikeouts this year before a swinging bunt single in the third.

UP NEXT

Giants: Jake Peavy (2-5, 6.34) is coming off his best start, pitching one-hit ball for seven innings against Atlanta. The right-hander will get extra rest due to off days for the team and pitch again in next Sunday’s nationally televised game.

Cardinals: Carlos Martinez (5-5, 3.69) struck out eight in eight scoreless innings his last start at Milwaukee, ending a career-worst five-game losing streak.

— Associated Press —

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