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Kansas City bounces back to rout Detroit 10-3

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Salvador Perez homered to end Michael Fulmer’s long scoreless innings streak, Yordano Ventura kept the Tigers’ big bats off balance and the Kansas City Royals routed Detroit 10-3 on Friday night.

Ventura (6-4) scattered six hits while striking out five without a walk, ultimately outlasting Fulmer (7-2) in what began as an entertaining pitching duel between two bright young starters.

Fulmer pushed his streak to a Tigers rookie-record 33 1/3 innings before Perez went deep in the sixth. He left after walking the next two batters, allowing five hits and four walks in 5 2/3 innings.

Perez drove in two more in the seventh, Kendrys Morales hit a three-run shot in the eighth, and Eric Hosmer added three RBI as the Royals beat up on the Detroit bullpen late.

Justin Upton hit a two-run homer and Miguel Cabrera a solo shot off Dillon Gee in the ninth.

The Tigers had their only success against Ventura early, getting singles in each of the first three innings that amounted to nothing. Cabrera singled leading off the fourth but was taken out by another double play, and Nick Castellanos was left stranded after his single.

Ventura proceeded to retire the next seven batters he faced in a dominant performance.

Nearly as good was Fulmer, who left runners on second and third by striking out Brett Eibner in the second inning, and got Lorenzo Cain to ground into a double play with the bases loaded in the third.

The 23-year-old rookie made it through the fifth inning unscathed. Fulmer shattered the franchise rookie record of 28 2/3 set by John Hiller in August 1967, and then trumped the 32 innings that Orel Hershiser went as a rookie for the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1984.

Perez left Fulmer just short of Fernando Valenzuela’s 35-inning mark in 1981.

The big catcher turned on a two-out pitch in the sixth and sent it soaring 422 feet to left field, where it landed just shy of the Hall of Fame. It was Perez’s third homer in his last four games.

The Tigers got runners on second and third in the seventh, thanks in part to two errors. Kelvin Herrera entered and retired Steven Moya — Whit Merrifield made a marvelous play at second base for a fielder’s choice — and got James McCann for an inning-ending groundout to preserve the 1-0 lead.

All the drama evaporated as the Royals scored four in the seventh and five in the eighth.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Tigers: OF Cameron Maybin (left quad) ran before the game but got another night off. … OF J.D. Martinez (right elbow fracture) is expected to miss 4-to-6 weeks after getting hurt in Thursday’s series opener. “Of all the injuries he could’ve had running into the wall,” trainer Kevin Rand said, “this is probably the best.”

Royals: OF Alex Gordon (broken wrist) will begin a rehab assignment at Double-A Northwest Arkansas this weekend. He’ll get about 25 at-bats before rejoining the Royals. “We’ll judge it,” manager Ned Yost said, “but the way he looks in batting practice right now, I don’t think he’ll be there real long.”

UP NEXT

Tigers LHP Matt Boyd takes the mound against the team he faced in his major league debut last August. He will oppose Royals RHP Edinson Volquez, who worked seven scoreless against Cleveland in his last start.

— Associated Press —

Chiefs Training Camp schedule announced at Missouri Western

Chiefs Training Camp at Mo West jpgKANSAS CITY, Mo. – The Kansas City Chiefs announced dates for 2016 Chiefs Training Camp presented by Mosaic Life Care at Missouri Western State University in St. Joseph, Missouri. Unless otherwise noted, all training camp practices will be free of charge. Bleacher and hillside seating is free. Food and beverage tents will be available before and during practice sessions.

Kansas City’s first open practice to the public will be on Saturday, July 30. The club will hold social media days at training camp on July 31 and Aug. 5. “American Family” Fun Day will take place on Saturday, Aug. 6, and Season Ticket Member Appreciation Day along with Alumni Day will be held Sunday, Aug. 7. Full team autograph sessions are scheduled to take place July 30, July 31, Aug. 6 and Aug. 7. The Chiefs will hold a Military Appreciation Day at training camp again this season on Thursday, Aug. 18. Missouri Western will charge a $5 parking fee per vehicle per day. On July 30 and Aug. 6, MWSU will charge a $5 admission fee into practice.

The daily schedule is below. Practices held at 8:15 a.m. will run approximately two hours and 40 minutes. Practices held at 9:15 a.m. will run approximately one hour and 40 minutes.

All times and dates are subject to change. Walkthrough practices are closed to the public. If the club moves practice inside due to weather, practice will be closed and an announcement will be made via our website www.chiefs.com and other social media outlets.

Dates                               Times
Saturday, July 30             Practice – 3:30 p.m.
First Practice Open to the Public – $5 Admission Fee
*Team Autograph Session

Sunday, July 31               Practice – 8:15 a.m.
Social Media Day
*Team Autograph Session

Monday, Aug. 1               Practice – 8:15 a.m.

Tuesday, Aug. 2               Practice – 8:15 a.m.

Wednesday, Aug. 3          Practice – 9:15 a.m.

Thursday, Aug. 4              No Practice

Friday, Aug. 5                  Practice – 8:15 a.m.
Social Media Day

Saturday, Aug. 6              Practice – 8:15 a.m.
“American Family” Fun Day – $5 Admission Fee
*Team Autograph Session

Sunday, Aug. 7                Practice – 8:15 a.m.
Season Ticket Member Appreciation & Alumni Day
*Team Autograph Session

Monday, Aug. 8               Practice – 9:15 a.m.

Tuesday, Aug. 9               Practice – 8:15 a.m.

Wednesday, Aug. 10        Practice – 8:15 a.m.

Thursday, Aug. 11            No Practice

Friday, Aug. 12                No Practice

Saturday, Aug. 13            Preseason Game No. 1 – Chiefs vs. Seahawks – 3:30 p.m. CT

Sunday, Aug. 14              No Practice

Monday, Aug. 15              Practice – 8:15 a.m.

Tuesday, Aug. 16             Practice – 8:15 a.m.

Wednesday, Aug. 17        Practice – 9:15 a.m.

Thursday, Aug. 18            Practice – 8:15 a.m.
Military Appreciation Day – Final Camp Practice

— Chiefs Press Release —

Cardinals get blanked by Hamels, Rangers

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Rougned Odor homered and Cole Hamels pitched 7 2/3 innings as the Texas Rangers beat the St. Louis Cardinals 1-0 on Friday night.

Hamels (7-1) allowed three hits while striking out six and walking three. He lowered his road ERA to 1.64 this season and turned in his fourth consecutive quality start.

Hamels scattered five baserunners and allowed only one to reach second.

Odor homered on the first pitch he saw in the fifth, hitting it 433 feet to straightaway center. It was Odor’s third homer in as many games and the 19th for the Rangers in their last eight games.

Sam Dyson picked up his 12th save.

The Rangers have won four straight, improving to an AL-best 43-25. Texas improved to 4-0 all-time at Busch Stadium in the regular season and is a win away from winning a franchise-record eighth consecutive series.

Michael Wacha (2-7) lost a career-high seventh straight decision, despite allowing one run over 7 2/3 innings. He is the first Cardinals starter to lose seven straight decisions since Kip Wells in 2007.

It was the second straight quality start for Wacha, who gave up two runs in seven innings on Friday at Pittsburgh.

Matt Carpenter was the lone Cardinal to have success against Hamels, reaching all four times on two hits and two walks.

After reaching a season-high seven games over .500 on Sunday, the Cardinals have lost three straight and fell to 15-19 at home.

WELCOME BACK

The Cardinals recalled 2B Kolten Wong and optioned OF Jeremy Hazelbaker to Triple-A Memphis. Wong hit .429 with four homers and 11 RBI in seven games at Memphis and he also played center field in three of those games.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Rangers: RHP Tom Wilhelmsen cleared waivers and declined an outright assignment to Triple-A Round Rock, becoming a free agent. … RHP Nick Martinez will start Saturday instead of Yu Darvish (shoulder).

Cardinals: RHP Seth Maness (elbow) threw a scoreless inning at Triple-A Memphis on Thursday, his second in as many days.

UP NEXT

Rangers: Martinez (1-1, 3.38 ERA), who was called up from Round Rock on June 14, will be making his first start this season in the second of a three-game series Saturday. He earned his first career relief win at Oakland on Wednesday.

Cardinals: RHP Carlos Martinez (7-5, 3.46 ERA) is coming off a career-high 8 1/3 innings and 122 pitches while allowing one run at Pittsburgh last Saturday. He will be making his first career appearance against Texas.

— Associated Press —

Royals fall apart late in 10-4 loss to Detroit

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Victor Martinez hit three home runs, the Tigers pounded out six as a team and Detroit rallied from an early hole to beat the Kansas City Royals in the opener of a four-game series.

There should have been ample reason to celebrate.

Instead, there was just a little bit of melancholy in the clubhouse after a 10-4 victory Thursday night, the fallout of an injury to J.D. Martinez that could keep the outfielder out for up to six weeks.

Martinez was tracking a fly ball in the second inning when he hit the wall. He left the game and was taken for an X-ray, which revealed a non-displaced fracture in his right elbow. He’ll have a CT scan on Friday.

“We feel bad for J.D. It looked innocent,” said the Tigers’ Ian Kinsler.

In the meantime, Steven Moya will take his place in the lineup.

“We’d much rather have J.D. healthy and in the lineup, but he’s not,” Tigers manager Brad Ausmus said, “so we need Steven to pick up the slack, and everybody else to pick up the slack.”

They certainly did that Thursday night.

Victor Martinez hit a pair of solo shots and Nick Castellanos went deep before James McCann homered off Royals reliever Luke Hochevar (1-1) leading off the seventh to knot the game 4-all. Cabrera followed moments later with a two-run shot that gave the Tigers their first lead of the game.

Detroit added three more runs in the eighth before Martinez hit his third homer in the ninth. The veteran designated hitter’s other three-homer game came on July 16, 2004, at Seattle.

“I hung the bullpen out to dry,” said Royals starter Danny Duffy, who gave up the first two of Martinez’s homers. “I didn’t have my best stuff. I didn’t feel my best. That’s one thing people who stick around here do, is battle when they don’t feel as good as they normally do.”

Justin Verlander (7-5) allowed four runs on eight hits over seven innings, continuing his mastery of the Royals at Kauffman Stadium. Verlander improved to 13-5 in 22 starts in the ballpark.

Not only did the Royals’ five-game win streak end, so did their nine game home winning streak. It was their longest since reeling off 11 consecutive victories from March 31 to May 5, 2003.

“They have a good lineup, but then again you don’t want to go into it tying your own hands,” Hochevar said. “You’ve still got to go out and pitch your game, pitch your strengths and attack them and trust your stuff is good enough to get them out.”

The Royals were in control until their normally staunch bullpen let them down. Eric Hosmer and Lorenzo Cain drove in runs in the first inning to give them the lead, and Brett Eibner — fresh of the disabled list — matched Martinez’s first homer by driving in a run in the bottom of the second.

Martinez and Castellanos went deep in the fourth, tying the game, before Eibner connected leading off the fifth for the first home run of his career. But then the Royals’ relievers began throwing batting practice.

McCann’s tying shot cleared the wall in spacious Kauffman Stadium with plenty of room to spare, and the home run by Cabrera — his 12th career homer at The K — just cleared the wall in right field.

Martinez capped the big night for the Tigers offense with his no-doubt homer in the ninth.

“Definitely, I felt pretty good,” said Martinez, who was back in the lineup after getting some rest for a bothersome knee. “But the most important thing was to put together a good game like that.”

ROSTER MOVES

Eibner, who had been out with a sprained left ankle, arrived about an hour before first pitch and was put right into the lineup. The Royals optioned OF Reymond Fuentes to Triple-A Omaha to make room for him.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Tigers: OF Cameron Maybin got the night off with tightness in his quad.

Royals: LF Alex Gordon (broken wrist) took batting practice for the second straight day, hitting a series of homers into the fountains. Royals manager Ned Yost said he could begin a rehab assignment this week.

UP NEXT

Tigers RHP Michael Fulmer has won five straight games, allowing one earned run over 34 1/3 innings, and has thrown at least six shutout innings in each of his last four starts. He’ll face Royals RHP Yordano Ventura, who struck out a season-high 10 in a win over the White Sox last Sunday.

— Associated Press —

Royals roll past Indians 9-4 to complete 3-game sweep

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Royals won six straight games to take the AL Central lead, then dropped eight straight to lose it.

Now, they’re riding another five-game winning streak.

“Yeah, to say we’re streaky — it’s kind of crazy how it’s going,” said Ian Kennedy, who pitched Kansas City to a 9-4 victory over the Cleveland Indians on Wednesday night to polish off a three-game sweep.

The Royals have won nine straight at home, their best stretch since 2003.

Salvador Perez hit a three-run shot during a go-ahead fifth inning against Corey Kluber (6-7), while Eric Hosmer added two RBI and Whit Merrifield remained hot to pace the Kansas City attack.

“We were on the attack early,” Hosmer said. “We took advantage of getting a lot of guys on base.”

Kennedy (5-5) allowed just five hits, including two-run homers by Rajai Davis and Michael Martinez, as he pitched into the seventh inning. He won for the first time since beating Cleveland on May 7.

Even with the two long balls, the Indians only managed seven runs the entire series.

Kluber gave up more than that in five innings Wednesday night. The 2014 Cy Young winner matched a career high by allowing eight runs and nine hits in a performance nearly as shoddy as his defense, which made two errors and probably could have been charged with a couple more.

“Yeah, to get swept is disappointing,” Kluber said. “We didn’t play very well these three games.”

Merrifield, who homered in each of the first two games, got the Royals going again with a base hit in the first inning. Consecutive doubles by Hosmer and Lorenzo Cain gave Kansas City a 2-0 lead.

Kluber also ran into trouble in the second inning, though it was caused by consecutive errors by second baseman Jason Kipnis and third baseman Martinez. Kluber bounced back to strand runners on second and third, then went through a stretch of six batters in which he struck out five.

“He’s tough,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “He’s just tough.”

The Indians tied it in the fifth when Kennedy failed to cover first base on Martinez’s grounder up the line. Moments later, Davis sent a 1-2 pitch soaring over the wall in left field to tie the game.

That only lasted until the bottom half of the inning.

Drew Butera blooped a double to right that fell between Cleveland fielders, then reached third on a groundout before scampering home for the go-ahead run on Kluber’s wild pitch. Hosmer and Cain added singles, and Perez swatted his 11th homer of the season to center field.

Perez hit a go-ahead two-run shot in the eighth inning of the Royals’ 3-2 win Tuesday night.

Kansas City (35-30) added three more runs in the sixth to put the game away, and move into a tie with the Indians for first place in the division.

“Very disappointing. We swept them at home and they return the favor,” Kipnis said. “I thought this entire series was more on the position players. I think the pitching staff did an outstanding job. You can’t ask for much more from the pitching staff.”

TROUBLED TRIBE

The Indians had not been swept at Kauffman Stadium since July 31-Aug. 2, 2012. They have lost six of their last nine after winning their previous six, trending in the opposite direction of the Royals. Part of the problem has been sloppy fielding — they have five errors in their last five games.

INFANTE OUT

The Royals designated INF Omar Infante for assignment, likely ending his tenure in KC. Infante has struggled with injuries since signing a $30.25 million, four-year deal. Unless he is traded or claimed on waivers, both unlikely, the Royals would owe him the remainder of $7.75 million due this season, $8 million on his contract next season and a $2 million buyout for the 2018 season.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals OF Alex Gordon (broken right hand) took batting practice for the first time since landing on the DL on May 23, even hitting a homer into the fountains. Gordon does not know when he will begin a rehab assignment but said “it should be coming soon.” … Royals RHP Kris Medlen (right rotator inflammation) made first rehab start Wednesday for Northwest Arkansas. He threw two scoreless innings.

UP NEXT

Royals LHP Danny Duffy opens a four-game series against Detroit on Thursday night, while Cleveland takes the day off before beginning a three-game set against the White Sox on Friday night.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals get swept by Astros

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — The Houston Astros have found life since moving George Springer to the leadoff spot, and Wednesday night was a perfect example.

Springer had the go-ahead two-run homer in the eighth inning, threw out a runner at the plate from right field and almost nailed a second with his arm in a 4-1 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals for a two-game sweep.

“George always does things,” Houston starter Collin McHugh said. “It was a very typical George day.”

Tony Sipp (1-2) got the last out of the seventh, Carlos Correa’s two-run single off Trevor Rosenthal made it a three-run lead in the ninth and Will Harris finished for his fifth save in as many chances.

The Astros are 15-7 since shifting Springer ahead of Jose Altuve, who batted third in both games against St. Louis and had two hits on Wednesday. Springer had been in a 4-for-37 slump before connecting to straightaway center off Kevin Siegrist (4-2) with two outs for his 15th homer.

“I’ve been hitting the ball hard, just haven’t gotten anything out of it,” Springer said. “You just have to keep grinding and do anything that you can, and that’s on the bases or the outfield or try to draw a walk, whatever it is.”

Cardinals starter Adam Wainwright worked seven innings of four-hit ball and Greg Garcia, batting for the pitcher in the bottom half, hit an RBI single off McHugh to open the scoring.

“I’d rather be up 10-0 but when you get locked in those 0-0 games sometimes it does drive you to pitch a little more focused,” Wainwright said. “You don’t want to be the first one to give up a run.”

Yadier Molina started the two-out rally with a single, one of his three hits, and barely beat Springer’s relay home from right.

Wainwright is 13-1 in his career with a 1.48 ERA against the Astros, the lowest in major league history against an opponent among starters with at least 10 starts. He struck out six, walked three and faced only one batter with a runner in scoring position when he fanned McHugh to end the fifth.

McHugh allowed one run in 6 2/3 innings with six strikeouts and two walks.

The Astros wrapped up their first trip to St. Louis since the hacking scandal of the team’s data base last year.

BIG MISS

The Cardinals had three hits and an intentional walk in the fifth but came up empty. The key play: Jhonny Peralta dropped a blooper just inside the line in medium right for a hit but Stephen Piscotty, who doubled to open the inning, was an easy out at the plate on the relay by Springer from right field.

Springer elected not to attempt a diving catch and take his chances on the bounce, reasoning that Piscotty would have had to wait, and earned his seventh assist.

GREAT GRABS

Cardinals 1B Matt Adams made an outstanding sliding catch of Altuve’s foul pop near the St. Louis dugout to end the top of the sixth. LF Matt Holliday slid to snare Correa’s sinking liner to end the first.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Astros: RHP Luke Gregorson is on the family medical reserve list and is expected back within a week.

Cardinals: Demoted 2B Kolten Wong has been playing CF for Triple-A Memphis, helping his chances for a recall at some point. … C Brayan Pena returned to Memphis for a rehab start after spending time at home in Orlando, Florida, attending to a personal issue.

UP NEXT

Astros: The rotation has been juggled a bit and Lance McCullers (3-2, 4.54) will work the opener of a three-game series against the Reds on Friday, followed by Dallas Keuchel (3-9, 5.54) and Mike Fiers (4-3, 4.76).

Cardinals: Michael Wacha (2-6, 4.91) has lost a career-worst six consecutive decisions since April 28 entering the opener of a weekend series against the Rangers on Friday. The last St. Louis pitcher to lose seven straight was Kip Wells in 2007.

— Associated Press —

Perez homers in eighth to send KC to 3-2 win over Indians

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Royals manager Ned Yost never lacks for confidence, even with his team struggling to score runs and trailing with two outs in the eighth inning against the best team in the division.

“I had a really good feeling about Sal coming up there and doing something special,” Yost said.

That would be Salvador Perez, of course. The All-Star catcher made Yost seem prophetic when he followed a single by Eric Hosmer with a two-run homer to center, propelling Kansas City to a 3-2 victory over the Cleveland Indians on Tuesday night.

Joakim Soria (3-2) pitched a scoreless eighth inning for Kansas City, then proceeded to handle the ninth with setup men Luke Hochevar Kelvin Herrera and closer Wade Davis getting the night off — the three of them were unavailable after heavy usage the previous three days.

Soria got Jason Kipnis to pop out with runners on first and second to end it.

“If you can keep these guys in the game, they like the late-inning heroics,” said Dillon Gee, who tossed three scoreless innings in relief of Chris Young to make the comeback possible.

Whit Merrifield also went deep for the Royals, who have won four straight after an eight-game skid, while Perez’s shot off Bryan Shaw (0-3) was the first non-solo homer by the Royals in their last 12.

The comeback also scuttled a solid performance by Josh Tomlin, who allowed seven hits while striking out five without a walk. He exited with a 2-1 lead and in line to beat Kansas City for the third time.

“I don’t care about my win. I care about this team winning games,” he said. “It stinks to lose in that situation. We have the utmost faith in Shaw every time he goes out there. He’s one of the best relievers, in my opinion. He’ll make adjustments. We’ve seen what he’s done in the past.”

The Indians took their first lead of the series when Carlos Santana homered in the third, his 13th of the year. It was also the AL-leading 18th that Chris Young had allowed.

Merrifield matched it in the bottom half, the 27-year-old rookie sending a 2-2 pitch over the left-field wall. His second career homer came 24 hours after his first.

Young continued to struggle with his command in the fifth, walking two more batters to exceed his 85-pitch limit. Dillon Gee entered in relief and Kipnis promptly swatted the second pitch he saw for an RBI single that gave Cleveland a 2-1 lead.

The Royals had a chance to tie it in the seventh when pinch hitter Paulo Orlando slapped a single and Cheslor Cuthbert sacrificed him to second, but Jarrod Dyson and Merrifield were unable to get him home.

Perez made it a forgotten point with his big hit in the eighth.

“It’s a long season but you want to play night-in and night-out good baseball,” Young said. “Be nice to get on a streak now and finish up this series well.”

STAKING A CLAIM

The Royals claimed LHP Tyler Olson off waivers from the Yankees and assigned him to Triple-A Omaha, and created roster space by transferring 3B Mike Moustakas (ACL) to the 60-day DL. Olson has spent most of the season in the minors, though he did throw 2 2/3 innings of relief for New York in April.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: 3B Moustakas stopped in the clubhouse after surgery to repair a torn right ACL. He has already started rehabbed, most of which will take place in Florida. “It’s not fun to sit there and watch and not be out there,” he said, “but my job is to get better and get ready for next season.”

Indians: 3B Juan Uribe was feeling better after sustaining a testicular contusion Sunday against the Angels. He remained out of the lineup, though manager Terry Francona said Uribe did all pregame work.

UP NEXT

Indians RHP Corey Kluber tries to build on a complete-game victory over the Angels in the series finale Wednesday night. RHP Ian Kennedy is on the mound for Kansas City.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis drops series opener to Houston 5-2

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Doug Fister pitched effectively into the eighth inning and gave the Houston Astros breathing room with a two-run single in a 5-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Tuesday night.

Colby Rasmus hit his 150th career homer in his first game back in St. Louis since 2011. Fister had been 0 for 2 on the season before hitting the first pitch from reliever Seung Hwan Oh up the middle to put the Astros up by three in the seventh.

Matt Adams and Brandon Moss homered for the Cardinals, whose season-best five-game winning streak ended.

Fister (7-3) allowed two runs and five hits in 7 1/3 innings, his longest outing of the season, to win his sixth consecutive decision. The Astros have won the right-hander’s last nine starts overall.

The hit gave Fister four career RBI, and the first since he had one in 2013 for Detroit.

The Astros’ 6-7-8 hitters were a combined 6 for 7 against Jaime Garcia (4-6). Rasmus also singled, Carlos Gomez singled and scored twice and Marwin Gonzalez singled and doubled with an RBI.

Fister retired 14 straight after Adams homered leading off the second, a streak that ended on Moss’ 15th homer in the sixth that cut the Astros’ lead to 3-2. Moss has four homers in his last seven games.

Garcia has lost four of his last five decisions. The lefty is 2-6 with a 6.15 ERA in 10 career starts against Houston.

Will Harris worked a perfect ninth for his fourth save in as many chances.

The Astros are making their first trip to St. Louis since the hacking scandal of the team’s data base last year.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Astros: SS Carlos Correa (left ankle) returned to the lineup after missing three games.

Cardinals: Reliever Seth Maness (elbow) and C Brayan Pena (knee) remain on rehab assignments with Double-A Springfield with no firm call-up plans.

UP NEXT

Astros: Collin McHugh lasted just 3 2/3 innings his last start, allowing four runs in a loss at Texas. He has a 9.49 ERA in the first inning.

Cardinals: Adam Wainwright is 13-1 with a 1.57 ERA in his career against Houston, including seven victories his last seven outings. He had a season-high nine strikeouts last time out in a victory at Cincinnati.

— Associated Press —

Merrifield, Volquez lead Kansas City to 2-1 win over Indians

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Whit Merrifield hit his first career homer, Edinson Volquez tossed seven innings of two-hit ball and the Kansas City Royals beat Cleveland 2-1 on Monday night to end a five-game skid against the Indians.

Alcides Escobar also drove in a run for the Royals, who have won three in a row after an eight-game losing streak. They also won their seventh consecutive game at Kauffman Stadium.

Volquez (6-6) walked the bases loaded in the first inning before settling down, allowing only a double to Jason Kipnis and a single to Lonnie Chisenhall. Volquez also hit a batter with a pitch and worked around an error, but ultimately kept the Indians from scoring.

Kelvin Herrera allowed a leadoff homer to Kipnis in the eighth but navigated the rest of the inning, and Wade Davis pitched around a leadoff single in the ninth for his 18th save.

Carlos Carrasco (2-2) gave up both Kansas City runs and 10 hits over six innings.

Merrifield, who made his big league debut last month, tripled to start the game and scored when Escobar followed with a single. Then, the 27-year-old rookie lived up to his “Two-hit Whit” moniker by driving an 0-2 pitch over the left-field wall with two outs in the fourth.

He was greeted at the dugout by Royals catcher Salvador Perez, who playfully doffed his helmet.

Merrifield, considered a super-utility player, also helped turn a trio of double plays while getting another start at second base. One of them ended the eighth inning and preserved a 2-1 lead.

The Indians had plenty of opportunities, even after Chisenhall grounded out to leave the bases full in the first inning. Kipnis was left standing on second in the third, and the Indians left runners at the corners in the fourth when Rajai Davis grounded out to end the inning.

Yan Gomes squandered another chance by grounding into an inning-ending double play in the sixth, and Jose Ramirez did likewise when he grounded to Merrifield in the eighth.

ROYAL INTRODUCTION

The Royals introduced their top pick in this year’s first-year player draft, 6-foot-4 RHP A.J. Puckett, prior to the game. The Pepperdine pitcher was taken in the second round at No. 67 overall and agreed to a signing bonus of $1.2 million.

FOUNDATION DONATION

The Kauffman Foundation announced a $1 million grant to the Urban Youth Baseball Academy, a project spearheaded by Royals GM Dayton Moore. The foundation was started in 1966 by Ewing Kauffman, who founded the Royals and owned the team until his death in 1993.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Indians 3B Juan Uribe got the night off after taking a hard grounder squarely in the groin Sunday against the Angels. Uribe left on a cart with a testicular contusion.

UP NEXT

Indians RHP Josh Tomlin tries to beat the Royals for the third time this season when the teams continue their series Tuesday night. RHP Chris Young pitches for Kansas City for the first time since June 5 in Cleveland, when he allowed four solo homers in a 7-0 loss.

— Associated Press —

Ventura pitches Royals past White Sox 3-1

riggertRoyalsCHICAGO (AP) — The Baltimore brawl is over. Yordano Ventura is concentrating on finding his form for the Kansas City Royals.

This was an awfully nice step in that direction.

Ventura pitched seven sharp innings in his first start since his fight with Manny Machado, and the Royals beat the Chicago White Sox 3-1 on Sunday for their second straight win following an eight-game losing streak.

“Today (I) was feeling what (I’ve) been working on all along,” Ventura said, with catching coach Pedro Grifol serving as translator, “which is get the ball out of the glove quickly and get out in front.”

Ventura (5-4) struck out a season-high 10 and walked one in his first win since May 17 against Boston, making the most of Kansas City’s run-scoring singles in the first and second. Salvador Perez added a leadoff homer down the left-field line in the ninth.

The 25-year-old Ventura went 0-2 with a 6.17 ERA in his previous four starts.

“When we took him out of the game, I told him tomorrow his duty was to come in and watch every pitch of that ballgame because every pitch that he delivered for me was phenomenal,” manager Ned Yost said.

Ventura was suspended nine games by Major League Baseball after he hit Machado in the back with a 99 mph fastball in the fifth inning of a 9-1 loss Tuesday, leading to a bench-clearing fight. But the right-hander appealed the punishment and is allowed to pitch until the process is complete.

“For me, I mean, he was totally judged guilty without even a trial, without hearing any of the evidence,” Yost said. “To me, that wasn’t right, but it is what it is.”

Chicago put runners on first and third with no outs in the fifth, but J.B. Shuck struck out looking and Ventura got rookie Tim Anderson to bounce into a double play — one of three on the day for Chicago. After Jose Abreu homered in the sixth, Ventura struck out Melky Cabrera and Todd Frazier to end the inning.

Kelvin Herrera worked the eighth and Wade Davis finished for his 17th save in 18 chances, helping Yost improve to 500-499 in seven years with Kansas City.

The White Sox lost for the 14th time in their last 18 games — five of those defeats have come against the Royals.

“There’s no worry,” left-hander Carlos Rodon said. “We know we’re good enough. We’re just going through a rough patch.”

Rodon (2-6) shook off a slow start and pitched six effective innings after he was pushed back a couple of days due to a sore neck. He allowed seven hits, struck out seven and walked two.

“He threw well,” White Sox manager Robin Ventura said. “He got into some binds there and I think he limited his chances. There could have been some big innings there and he bucked up and got out of it.”

Kendrys Morales’ two-out RBI single got Kansas City on the board in the first, and Whit Merrifield added another run-scoring single in the second.

OLD FRIENDS

White Sox right-hander James Shields chatted with Yost when he visited the Royals before the game.

Shields won 27 games over two seasons in Kansas City, helping the Royals reach the 2014 World Series. He signed with San Diego in February 2015 and was traded to the White Sox on June 4.

“He left a big impact here. It’s good to see him,” Yost said. “I’m glad he’s back in the American League.”

Shields lasted just two-plus innings in an 11-4 loss to Washington in his White Sox debut on Wednesday. He pitches again on Monday against Detroit.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Perez was checked on by Yost and a trainer after the catcher fell awkwardly while chasing a wild pitch in the fourth inning. Perez stayed in after catching a warmup pitch from Ventura.

UP NEXT

Royals: RHP Edinson Volquez (5-6, 4.25 ERA) gets the ball when Kansas City begins a seven-game homestand Monday night against Cleveland. RHP Carlos Carrasco (2-1, 3.48) pitches for the Indians in the opener of a three-game series.

White Sox: Shields (2-8, 5.06 ERA) is 7-6 with a 4.10 ERA in 18 career starts against Detroit. LHP Matt Boyd (0-1, 3.38) goes for the Tigers.

— Associated Press —

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