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Chiefs get second straight win as they hammer New England 41-14

Photo by Peter Aiken/Getty Images
Photo by Peter Aiken/Getty Images

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jamaal Charles proved he is back to full speed for the Kansas City Chiefs.

Tom Brady is still stuck in neutral for the New England Patriots.

Charles returned from an injury to score three touchdowns Monday night, Brady was picked off twice by the opportunistic Chiefs, and Kansas City routed New England 41-14 to hand Bill Belichick one of his worst losses as coach of the Patriots.

Charles, who missed last week’s win in Miami with a sprained ankle, ran for 92 yards and a score. The Pro Bowl running back also caught two short touchdown passes from Alex Smith, who had 248 yards passing and three touchdowns in a sharp performance before a raucous crowd.

The Chiefs (2-2) ended a four-game skid at Arrowhead Stadium dating to last season by handing the Patriots (2-2) their worst defeat since losing to San Diego 41-17 in 2005.

Along with throwing two interceptions, one of which was returned for a touchdown, Brady was strip-sacked by Tamba Hali to step up a field goal. Brady finished 14 of 23 for 159 yards.

The Chiefs forced the Patriots to air it out by stuffing Shane Vereen and Stevan Ridley. And when Brady dropped back, their front seven ran roughshod over their suspect offensive line.

It hardly helped the Patriots’ offense that it was trying to operate on the same night Chiefs fans were trying to reclaim the record for loudest outdoor sports venue. The record was set in the first half, when Guinness World Records record a noise level of 142.2 decibels — breaking the mark of 137.6 that the Seattle Seahawks’ fans had set last season.

The crowd included several members of the Kansas City Royals, who made the walk across the parking lot from Kauffman Stadium to watch the start of the game on the sidelines. The Royals will play their first postseason game since 1985 against the Oakland Athletics on Tuesday night.

Knile Davis finished with 107 yards rushing for Kansas City. Tight end Travis Kelce had eight catches for 93 yards and a score.

Charles gave the Chiefs an early lead with his first-quarter touchdown plunge, and then he extended the lead with a 5-yard TD catch in the second quarter.

Cairo Santos added a 22-yard field goal just before halftime for a 17-0 lead.

The field goal came after the Chiefs were bailed out by a defensive penalty. They had been stopped short on a pass play with 8 seconds left, but the penalty gave them a second chance.

Kansas City had 303 yards of first-half offense, the most against any Belichick-coached team.

Charles added his third touchdown of the game early in the second half, taking a short pass in the flat and stumbling into the end zone. He appeared to grab his hamstring on the way down and was met by trainers as he exited the field. After a brief trip to the locker room, Charles logged a few more carries before his night was done.

By that point, the game was pretty much done, too.

Brady threw a 44-yard touchdown pass in the third quarter to Brandon LaFell, who slipped the grasp of cornerback Marcus Cooper to reach the end zone. But he was picked off by Husain Abdullah later in the half, and Abdullah returned the interception 39 yards for a touchdown.

With the game out of hand, the Patriots gave rookie quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo a chance to play. He threw a late touchdown pass to Rob Gronkowski to complete the scoring.

— Associated Press —

Royals rally past White Sox in regular season finale

AP Photo/Paul Beaty
AP Photo/Paul Beaty

CHICAGO (AP) — Moments after Detroit secured the AL Central title, Kansas City manager Ned Yost started pulling some of his regulars from the lineup.

It was finally time to start preparing for the playoffs.

Kansas City’s chance for a division crown was erased by Detroit’s victory on Sunday, and the Royals went on to a 6-4 comeback win over Chicago in the final game for retiring White Sox captain Paul Konerko.

Coming into the final day of the regular season, Kansas City was hoping for a one-game playoff on Monday in Detroit for the division crown. But the Tigers clinched with a 3-0 victory over the Twins, sending the Royals to the wild-card game on Tuesday night against Oakland in their first postseason appearance since winning Game 7 of the 1985 World Series.

“There’s been teams that have won the World Series from the wild-card game, and they know that,” Yost said. “So they’re excited to start the process.

“When a lot of teams are going home, the elite few get to stay back and play in this tournament, and for the first time in a long time, we’ve earned the right to play in it.”

Kansas City (89-73) will send James Shields to the mound against Oakland left-hander Jon Lester when it hosts the first game of the 2014 playoffs. The Royals went 5-2 against the Athletics this year, but both of their losses came against Lester.

“I’m glad we can kind of put the regular season behind us, start this new journey right now,” first baseman Eric Hosmer said. “It’s going to be a fun experience.”

Konerko started at first base and played five innings on the final day of his 18-year big league career. The slugger, who paid tribute to his wife and three children by writing their names in the infield dirt behind the bag, went 0 for 3 with two strikeouts.

Konerko went out to first before Kansas City batted in the sixth inning, and then was replaced by Andy Wilkins. Konerko waved his hat toward the visiting dugout, where the Royals were standing and applauding along the top step, and then waved to the standing crowd of 32,266, once again hearing chants of “Paulie! Paulie!”

The 38-year-old disappeared into the dugout for a brief moment and then popped back out for a curtain call. He waved to the crowd again and acknowledged the sustained cheers with a bow before retreating back into the dugout, where he received more hugs and congratulations from his teammates.

“This whole thing blew me away,” said Konerko, who also was honored by the White Sox before Saturday night’s game. “I know I’ve been here a while and I knew there’d be something at the end that would be commemorating me being here for a while. But this whole thing, the fans and all that last night, I never thought that I was one of those guys that gets that.”

Konerko also lingered on the field after the loss to exchange high-fives with the fans along the railing of his longtime home. A six-time All-Star, Konerko finishes with a .279 average, 439 homers and 1,412 RBIs.

Chicago had a 4-2 lead when Konerko departed, but Kansas City responded with three runs in the sixth. Christian Colon, who was activated from the disabled list before the game, hit a tying two-run double off Daniel Webb (6-5) and Carlos Peguero added a tiebreaking RBI single.

Casey Coleman (1-0) pitched a scoreless inning for his first win since Sept. 9, 2011, for the Chicago Cubs against Milwaukee. Louis Coleman got three outs for his first save.

The White Sox (73-89) dropped five of their final six games. Adam Eaton went 3 for 3 before he was replaced in the field before the fifth inning, leaving him with a .300 batting average.

READY TO GO

Kansas City rookie Yordano Ventura allowed four runs and eight hits in four innings. He was lifted after 73 pitches and said he would be available for the game against the A’s.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Colon had been sidelined by a broken middle finger on his right hand.

White Sox: SS Alexei Ramirez (sore hamstring) and 1B Jose Abreu (sprained thumb) did not play.

MR. 162

Royals SS Alcides Escobar started every game this season. His previous career high was 158 games, set in 2011 and matched last year.

“It’s hard for most people, but it’s not hard for him,” Yost said. “He just has that body type that allows him to go out and play at a high level every single day.”

— Associated Press —

Cardinals beat D-backs 1-0, win NL Central title

AP Photo/St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Chris Lee
AP Photo/St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Chris Lee

PHOENIX (AP) — The St. Louis Cardinals never made it easy on themselves, laboring through injuries and inconsistency, unable to get into the NL Central race until around the All-Star break.

Even after they surged into the lead, the Cardinals had a hard time finishing it off, limping to the finish while allowing Pittsburgh to hang around for a chance at the division title.

It all came down to game No. 162 and it ended up being the easiest win of the season — even if they didn’t need it.

The Cardinals clinched their second straight NL Central title before the first pitch Sunday and finished off the regular season with a get-to-the-celebration 1-0 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Next up: The Dodgers in the NL division series Friday in Los Angeles.

“Fortunately, we weathered the storm and the guys just put their nose down,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. “I’m real proud of the guys.”

The Cardinals were assured of a playoff spot entering the day. What that spot would be depended on whether they could beat the Diamondbacks or Cincinnati knocked off Pittsburgh.

The Reds took care of business for the Cardinals by beating the Pirates 4-1, a victory that was announced about 10 minutes before St. Louis’ game against Arizona.

The Cardinals celebrated in the dugout, then it did it again after the final out against the Diamondbacks, wildly spraying each other with champagne and beer after an oh-so-sweet finish to their second straight 90-win season.

“We know Pittsburgh had a good run, but we had a better one,” Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina said.

Once Sunday’s game started, both teams seemed to go through the motions, the only run coming on Kolten Wong’s groundout in the sixth inning off Josh Collmenter (11-9).

The Cardinals scratched scheduled starter Adam Wainwright just before the start, using five relievers instead. Justin Masterson (3-3) pitched two scoreless innings and Carlos Martinez got the final two outs for his first save.

Arizona went down meekly, managing two hits to finish 64-98, worst in the majors and second-worst record in team history.

“We had higher expectations coming out of the spring,” Arizona reliever Brad Ziegler said. “Whether you look at the injuries or the pure lack of execution on the field, this is not how we wanted to finish. We definitely don’t feel like we are the worse team in baseball, even though the record says we were this year.”

The Cardinals went to the World Series last season, yet have seemed to make it hard on themselves this season, taking the NL Central race down to the final game after limping to the finish.

St. Louis had a chance to wrap up the division title Saturday night, but couldn’t put away the Diamondbacks, losing 5-2 after Mark Trumbo hit a pair of homers.

Cincinnati eliminated the drama for St. Louis with a win that sent the Pirates to the wild-card game and St. Louis into the division series. The result was announced at Chase Field about 10 minutes before first pitch and the Cardinals celebrated with a round of high-fives and hugs in the dugout.

“I think I threw a pitch without looking because I was watching the scoreboard,” Wainwright said. “It was a great feeling.”

Matheny said Wainwright would start the season finale regardless of what happened with the Pirates, but he was replaced by Nick Greenwood just before the game.

With nothing to play for on either side, the Cardinals and Diamondbacks breezed through a brisk, free-swinging game that was more like spring training than a season finale.

COLLMENTER’S OUTING

Collmenter was Arizona’s best starter down the stretch of the season and turned in another solid outing the finale, even if he didn’t get much support. The right-hander allowed three hits in eight innings, dropping his ERA to 1.26 over his final seven starts.

“I just wanted to finish the season strong,” Collmenter said.

NUMBERS

The Cardinals notched their 23rd shutout of the season, third-most in team history. The 1968 team had 30 and the 1944 team 26. … Arizona’s Ender Inciarte went 0 for 4 to end a 15-game hitting streak. … Masterson earned his first win as a reliever since July 5, 2009, against Seattle.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: LF Matt Holliday was out of the lineup after leaving in the sixth inning Saturday night due to flu-like symptoms.

UP NEXT:

Cardinals: Wainright will start against NL Cy Young Award favorite Clayton Kershaw in the division series opener against the Dodgers.

— Associated Press —

Royals miss shot at 1st place in AL Central with loss to White Sox

AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh
AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh

CHICAGO (AP) — A share of the AL Central was up for grabs. The Kansas City Royals couldn’t quite reach it.

The Royals squandered a chance to move into a tie for the division lead, losing to Jose Abreu and the Chicago White Sox, 5-4 on Saturday night.

“We definitely let one get away,” Royals first baseman Eric Hosmer said. “We had a lot of opportunities, guys on base to start innings. But we just didn’t get it done.”

The Detroit Tigers, who lost 12-3 at Minnesota on Saturday, remained one game ahead of the Royals entering the final day of the regular season. Kansas City clinched at least an AL wild card on Friday.

By virtue of a head-to-head tiebreaker with the Oakland Athletics, if the Royals are in the wild card game it will be played in Kansas City.

“We’re going to be excited that we got home field advantage,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “But again, it’s all going to come down to (Sunday). We’ll see what happens. Minnesota is doing a great job playing Detroit.”

Danny Duffy (9-12) lasted only two innings for the Royals. He allowed four runs, five hits and one walk. The White Sox jumped on him, scoring three runs in the first inning. Abreu capped the rally with his 36th home run.

“I didn’t have any command,” Duffy said. “I didn’t have my best stuff is the best way to put it.”

Abreu broke a 31-year-old franchise record for the most homers in a season by a rookie, previously held by Ron Kittle. They are the most by a rookie since St. Louis’ Albert Pujols hit 37 in 2001.

White Sox catcher Josh Phegley homered in the second and seventh innings for his first career multihomer game.

John Danks (11-11) pitched seven solid innings to earn his first home win since June 17. He allowed two runs, five hits and two walks, and struck out three.

“Every time we face him, we really struggle offensively,” Yost said of Danks. “He’s got our number right now, that dirty rat.”

The Royals mounted a rally in the eighth inning against Chicago’s bullpen. After the first two batters reached, Lorenzo Cain singled home Alcides Escobar to cut the deficit to 5-3. But Hosmer hit into a double play, and Billy Butler grounded out to end the threat.

Kansas City threatened again in the ninth. Mike Moustakas singled in Alex Gordon with two outs, but the Royals fell one run short.

Javy Guerra escaped the jam for his first save of the season.

Salvador Perez hit a solo shot in the seventh inning for his 17th homer.

Paul Konerko, who will retire at season’s end, was honored by the White Sox during a pregame ceremony. The White Sox unveiled a statue of Konerko, gave him several gifts, and displayed a series of video tributes from ex-teammates and players around the big leagues, including one from retiring New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter.

“I have to apologize for the game,” Konerko said. “To go out and try to play a game after that … I’m pretty good about distractions, but that day, no way. I was a mess out there.”

Konerko went 0-for-3 and exited in the seventh inning to a standing ovation. He then returned to the field for a curtain call.

TRAINER’S ROOM:

White Sox: RHP Jake Petricka left in the ninth inning due to a stiff lower back. He was attempting to earn his 15th save of the season.

Royals: INF Christian Colon, who is recovering from a broken middle finger on his right hand, hasn’t been activated from the disabled list. He was eligible to return on Sept. 22.

UP NEXT:

Royals RHP Yordano Ventura (14-10, 3.07) will face White Sox RHP Chris Bassitt (1-1, 3.65) on Sunday in the final game of the regular season.

POWER OUTAGE:

Salvador Perez’s home run was the 95th for the Royals this season. They are the only team in the majors under 100.

— Associated Press —

Royals defeat Chicago to wrap up first postseason birth since 1985

AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh
AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh

CHICAGO (AP) — The mob arrived as soon as Salvador Perez squeezed that final foul popup, officially bringing Kansas City’s playoff drought to an end.

Yes, the Royals are going back to the postseason.

Kansas City clinched a playoff spot Friday night for the first time in 29 years, beating the Chicago White Sox 3-1 behind seven scoreless innings from Jeremy Guthrie.

The Royals ended the longest active postseason drought in the four top North American leagues, and they did so with a unique offensive profile. Story

Kansas City secured at least a wild card spot and ended the longest active postseason drought among the major North American sports leagues. The last time the Royals made it to the playoffs, George Brett led Kansas City to a World Series victory over St. Louis in 1985.

“It feels better than expected,” said Billy Butler, a 2004 draft pick and eight-year veteran. “It’s a great thing. I’m proud to bring this organization something they envisioned when they drafted me.”

Small-market Kansas City endured more than its share of losing in recent years. But it contended into September last season and kicked down the playoff door on Friday.

The Royals crowded around Perez near the plate after he caught Michael Taylor’s foulout.

A large contingent of Kansas City fans crowded near the visitors dugout, watching the party, and players tossed black and white playoff caps to them before walking off the field.

The clubhouse was as chaotic as expected, with players dousing each other with bubbly and snapping pictures, whooping it up as the franchise’s years of losing gave way to pure joy.

As the scene unfolded, Brett stood nearby with a bottle in one hand and a cup in the other, doing his best not to get drenched.

“I got tired of the people criticizing the players on this team because they hadn’t won a World Series since 1985,” he said. “Ninety-five percent of these … guys weren’t even born in ’85. It’s not their fault. These guys played their [butts] off all year.”

And look where they are now.

With Detroit losing to Minnesota, Kansas City trails the Tigers by a game in the AL Central with two to play. If they are tied after Sunday, the teams will play game No. 163 at Detroit on Monday to determine the division winner.

Kansas City also maintained a one-game lead in the wild-card standings over Oakland, which won 6-2 at Texas.

The postgame celebration eventually returned to the field, where there was more spraying alcohol, more jumping up and down and more pictures, all to the delight of their supporters. Fans chanted “Let’s go Royals!” and some derogatory comments toward Detroit.

They held up signs that read “My playoff beard starts growing today,” and “Finally.”

That probably summed it up best for Kansas City. Yes, finally, the Royals are back.

“We know it’s been emotional, not only for us but for the city itself, which has supported us all along the way,” closer Greg Holland said.

Guthrie (13-11) could not have been much better, pitching four-hit ball while winning his third straight start. He struck out six and walked one. After the game, Guthrie tweeted this celebratory photo:

The White Sox scored in the eighth against Wade Davis. Adam Eaton tripled with one out and came around on Alexei Ramirez’s single. But Jose Abreu and Conor Gillaspie struck out to end the inning.

Holland worked the ninth for his 46th save in 48 chances.

Alcides Escobar had two hits, including a leadoff single in Kansas City’s three-run first against Hector Noesi, and the Royals won for the fifth time in six games.

Noesi (8-12) allowed six hits in six innings after it looked as if he might get knocked out early.

The first three batters each got a hit, starting with Escobar’s single. Nori AokiNori Aoki lined a run-scoring triple to right, and Lorenzo Cain had an RBI single for his 14th hit in 30 at-bats. Cain came around from second on Butler’s one-out single to make it 3-0.

Chicago’s Paul Konerko began his farewell weekend by going 0-for-4. The retiring slugger, back in the lineup after sitting out Thursday’s game, received loud cheers every time he stepped to the plate, starting with a standing ovation in the second inning.

In the Royals, Konerko sees some similarities to Chicago’s 2005 championship team, with its pitching and timely hitting.

“I think they have a real good shot to go a long ways,” he said. “Good for them. Enjoy it. I’m happy for those guys.”

TRAINER’S ROOM:

Royals: There was no further update on INF Christian Colon, who is recovering from a broken middle finger on his right hand. It’s not clear if he will be on the postseason roster.

White Sox: Reliever Nate Jones is confident he will make a full recovery after having Tommy John surgery on his right elbow in July. Jones expects to start throwing a week before Thanksgiving. Jones also had back surgery in May. … The White Sox held OF Avisail Garcia out of the lineup for precautionary reasons after he left Thursday’s game because of a stiff lower back. Manager Robin Ventura expects him to be ready to play Saturday.

UP NEXT:

LHP Danny Duffy (9-11, 2.32 ERA) starts Saturday for Kansas City, with LHP John Danks (10-11, 4.82 ERA) pitching for Chicago.

— Associated Press —

Royals close in on playoffs, beat White Sox 6-3

AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh
AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh

CHICAGO (AP) — Whether it’s through a wild card or the AL Central title, Lorenzo Cain doesn’t care how the Kansas City Royals reach the playoffs.

He just wants to get there.

Eric Hosmer homered and drove in two runs, Cain had four hits and scored twice, and the Royals put themselves on the verge of a playoff spot with a 6-3 victory over the Chicago White Sox on Thursday night.

One more win for Kansas City, or a loss by Seattle, will send the Royals to the postseason for the first time since George Brett led them to a World Series championship in 1985.

Kansas City remained two games behind Detroit in the Central and moved one up on Oakland in the wild-card standings.

“We definitely want to win the division, but any way we can get in (the playoffs), we’ll take it,” Cain said.

The Royals aren’t about to be picky considering how long it’s been and all the losing for the franchise along the way. They were September contenders last season for the first time in a decade on the way to 86 wins.

Now they are right on the postseason doorstep, poised to barge in.

“I think this team’s learned a lot,” starter James Shields said. “I think we’ve got a mix of good veterans in here to keep this team loose. We’re really loose and having fun right now and that’s what it’s all about.”

Hosmer had three hits, including an RBI single in the first and a tying solo homer off Jose Quintana in the sixth.

The White Sox held retiring captain Paul Konerko out of the lineup, but he expects to start the final three games. He has been playing through a broken bone in his left hand and was a little sore after playing two of the previous three games in Detroit.

The Royals went ahead after back-to-back singles by Cain and Hosmer put runners on first and third in the eighth.

Jake Petricka relieved Quintana, and it looked as if the White Sox would get out of it when Billy Butler sent a grounder to shortstop.

But second baseman Marcus Semien bounced the relay to first after catching the throw from Alexei Ramirez. That allowed Cain to score the go-ahead run, and Alex Gordon followed with an RBI single to make it 5-3.

That made a winner of Kelvin Herrera (4-3), who worked a scoreless seventh after Shields went six innings.

Wade Davis pitched the eighth and Greg Holland worked the ninth for his 45th save in 47 chances.

Shields allowed three runs and five hits, including a two-run homer by Josh Phegley.

Quintana (9-11) gave up five runs and 11 hits over 7 1/3 innings.

“He threw a good game,” Chicago manager Robin Ventura said. “We had a shot there to get out of it for him, and we didn’t. You’ve got to be able to do that.”

TRAINER’S ROOM:

Royals: INF Christian Colon (broken middle finger) played six innings and had two hits in his first rehab game in the Arizona instructional league, general manager Dayton Moore said. Moore had no comment when asked how Colon’s finger felt, and it’s not clear if he will be on the postseason roster.

White Sox: White Sox OF Avisail Garcia left the game because of a stiff lower back. He lined out in the second inning and was replaced in right field by Moises Sierra before the top of the third. He is day to day, although Ventura expects him to sit out Saturday. … 2B Carlos Sanchez was out of the lineup with his wife set to have a baby.

UP NEXT:

The Royals send RHP Jeremy Guthrie (12-11, 4.28 ERA) to the mound, hoping to wrap up a playoff berth. RHP Hector Noesi (8-10, 4.39) pitches for Chicago.

NO MICKEY MOUSE OPERATION

There was quite a scene in the visiting clubhouse before the game. Royals RHP Liam Hendricks was on all fours while leading the charge to capture a mouse hiding in one corner. He eventually trapped it in a box and took it to the bullpen for the game, with the players dubbing it the “Rally Mouse.”

Hendricks hopes to find the same mouse — or another one — before Saturday’s game and keep it in the bullpen.

“Whatever works, man,” manager Ned Yost said.

— Associated Press —

Royals lose series finale at Cleveland; fall two games back of Detroit

AP Photo/Tony Dejak
AP Photo/Tony Dejak

CLEVELAND (AP) — They’re alive, barely, but it beats the alternative. The Indians’ playoff hopes are fragile, and they’re doing all they can to keep them from shattering.

Yan Gomes hit a three-run homer, Michael Brantley got three more hits and Cleveland stayed in the AL wild-card chase for at least one more day with a 6-4 win over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday night.

A loss would have eliminated the Indians, but after blowing a 3-0 lead, they rallied and moved within 3 1/2 games of Kansas City and Oakland in the wild-card standings. There are four days left in the regular season.

“We said all year long as long as we have life, we’re going to keep battling and that’s exactly what we did tonight,” outfielder David Murphy said. “We’ve had some good moments. We’ve had some bad moments this season, but hopefully we’re going to be going into the last series of the season still alive.”

The Royals, who haven’t made the playoffs since 1985, fell two games behind first-place Detroit in the AL Central.

Zach McAllister (4-7) pitched 2 1/3 scoreless innings and Cody Allen worked the ninth for his 23rd save as the Indians kept their season relevant.

They’re off on Thursday, but the Indians will closely monitor Kansas City’s game in Chicago and Oakland’s visit to Texas.

“It has all to do whether or not we have life coming into Friday,” Murphy said, “so regardless we’re going to come ready to play, but hopefully we’re going to be playing for something.”

Brantley has hit safely in 15 straight games and needs one more hit to be the first Indians player with 200 in a season since Kenny Lofton in 1996.

The Indians took the lead in the fifth off rookie Brandon Finnegan (0-1) on Carlos Santana’s RBI groundout. Cleveland added a run in the sixth on Murphy’s pinch sacrifice fly.

Cleveland entered the unusual series — the teams completed a suspended game on Monday — 3 1/2 games behind the Royals and the Indians ended in the same place. Unfortunately for them, they wasted a chance to pull closer and now have to win their final three games and hope for help from other teams to play in the postseason.

Billy Butler had three RBIs for Kansas City, which can lock up one of the two wild cards by winning one of four games in Chicago against the White Sox starting Thursday.

“I know things are close, we’re close,” Butler said. “We’ve got four games left. If we could do it right now, we’d be in a playoff spot. You can’t help but realize that it’s right around the corner, but you have to keep grinding and keep your head down.”

Their flimsy playoff hopes fading, the Indians scored twice in the fifth to take a 5-4 lead.

Jason Vargas hit Michael Bourn with a pitch to open the inning and Royals manager Ned Yost pulled the left-hander, who has just one win in his last seven starts.

Jose Ramirez doubled off the wall and the speedy Bourn, waved around by third-base coach Mike Sarbaugh, scored the tying run on a headfirst dive into the plate, reaching in with his left hand to avoid catcher Salvador Perez’s tag.

“When you see a guy dive into home like that you realize nobody’s playing out the string,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. “He was pretty fired up.”

Gomes’ two-out shot, his 21st homer, to straightaway center gave the Indians a 3-0 lead in the first.

WALK THIS WAY

Santana walked three times, giving him 112 this season, the sixth most in club history. Santana has walked more than any major league switch-hitter since Lance Berkman (127) for Houston in 2002.

NO RELIEF

Indians reliever Bryan Shaw tied the club record with his 79th appearance, matching the mark set by Bobby Howry in 2005.

K KINGS

Cleveland’s pitchers have combined for 1,419 strikeouts, nine shy of the major league record set by Detroit in 2013.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Indians: Nick Swisher rejoined his teammates after undergoing surgery on both knees last month. Swisher tried to play through pain for several months before deciding to have his knees “cleaned out.” He expects to be ready for the start of spring training.

UP NEXT

Royals: RHP James Shields (14-8) makes his team-leading 34th start as Kansas City tries to clinch a playoff spot in Chicago. Shields is 20-5 with a 2.48 ERA on the road since the start of 2013.

Indians: The Indians end a stretch of 30 games in 30 days with their final off day of 2014. They open a three-game series vs. Tampa Bay on Friday as Corey Kluber (17-9) tries to strengthen his case for the Cy Young.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis loses second straight game to Cubs

AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast
AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast

CHICAGO (AP) — Preparing for the final weekend of the regular season, the St. Louis Cardinals hoped to easily move past the non-contending Chicago Cubs.

Instead, they ran into Chicago’s buzzsaw — Jake Arrieta.

Arrieta (10-5), coming off a one-hit shutout against Cincinnati last week, limited St. Louis to two hits and an unearned run while striking out 10 in seven innings, leading the Cubs to a 3-1 victory.

“He’s got swing-and-miss stuff in the strike zone and he’s got the ability to get it out of the strike zone as well, and that makes him tough,” Cardinals infielder Matt Carpenter said. “Anytime you got a guy with that type of electric stuff, you kind of feel like you’re on defense up there. Anytime he gets ahead of you, you’re in a bad spot.”

Arrieta outdueled St. Louis’ John Lackey (3-3), both on the mound and at the plate. After Lackey intentionally walked Logan Watkins in the fourth inning, Arrieta hit a two-run triple — the first triple of his career and the first by a Cubs pitcher since 2012. The Cubs never surrendered the lead.

“It’s amazing that that at-bat is the one that does it,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said.

Lackey gave up two runs and five hits in 6 2/3 innings. He struck out eight, his most since joining the Cardinals at the trade deadline.

The Cardinals, who clinched a playoff berth earlier in the week, remained 1 1/2 games ahead of Pittsburgh in the NL Central. The Pirates lost at Atlanta, reducing St. Louis’ magic number to three for clinching the division title.

“I’m tired of looking up there and waiting for somebody else to help us,” Matheny said following the game. “Nobody’s helped us all season long. Why are they going to start now?”

The Cardinals’ loss assured NL East champion Washington will open a division series at home.

The Cardinals were held without a hit through four innings but managed two singles in the fifth. Yadier Molina came in to score on Welington Castillo’s throwing error, cutting the Cubs lead to 2-1.

Molina has hit safely in seven consecutive games and 12 of his past 14.

Chris Valaika had a pinch-hit RBI single in the eighth to extend the Cubs lead to 3-1.

The Cardinals mounted a two-out rally in the ninth, but Hector Rondon worked out of the jam for his 13th consecutive save and his 27th in 31 opportunities this season.

After the game, Arrieta took pride in playing the role of spoiler.

“To pitch well against them, at this time of the season with the implications on the game that are there, it’s meaningful,” Arrieta said. “It’s just another positive thing to use moving forward into the offseason.”

Arrieta has allowed two or fewer runs in 19 of 25 starts this season.

TRAINING ROOM

Cubs: SS Starlin Castro will miss the remainder of the season, according to manager Rick Renteria. Castro injured his left ankle sliding into home against the Milwaukee Brewers on Sept. 2.

Cardinals: OF Jon Jay missed Wednesday’s game due to a personal matter. He will rejoin the team on Friday in Arizona.

UP NEXT

Cubs: LHP Eric Jokisch (0-0, 1.74) will make his first career start on Friday when the Cubs open a three-game set at Milwaukee.

Cardinals: RHP Michael Wacha (5-6, 3.18), who missed approximated three months earlier this season with a stress reaction in his throwing shoulder, starts for the Cardinals on Friday against Arizona.

WRIGLEY FACELIFT

Now that the Cubs’ regular-season schedule is over, improvements and renovations at the 100-year-old ballpark — including constructing a large video scoreboard in left field — are expected to begin soon. The scoreboard and other outfield signs are expected to be in place by the start of next season, but the new home clubhouse isn’t slated to be completed until 2016.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City rolls past Cleveland; magic number down to three

riggertRoyalsCLEVELAND (AP) — Rookie Yordano Ventura blanked Cleveland’s punchless offense for seven innings as the Kansas City Royals kept pressure on first-place Detroit in the AL Central with a 7-1 win over the Indians on Tuesday night.

The hard-throwing Ventura (14-10) allowed four singles and threw a 100 mph fastball on his 104th pitch.

Salvador Perez’s two-out, two-run double off Danny Salazar (6-8) put the Royals ahead 5-0 in the fifth and they turned their attention to the left-field scoreboard to monitor the Tigers’ score. Kansas City entered one game out of first and with a grasp on one of the league’s two wild-card spots.

The Royals are closing in on their first postseason appearance since 1985, when they won their only World Series title.

At 86-71, Kansas City matched its win total from last season. It’s the first time the Royals have had consecutive seasons with at least 86 victories since 1977-78.

The Indians’ faint playoff hopes grew dimmer. Cleveland trails Kansas City by 4 1/2 games in the wild-card chase with four games remaining. The Royals have five games left.

Cleveland’s offense went into a funk at the worst time possible. The Indians scored an unearned run in the eighth, ending a string of 19 straight scoreless innings.

Ventura made his major league debut against the Indians last September, a performance Indians manager Terry Francona called “electric.”

“We’re not hoping for electric tonight,” Francona said.

Ventura didn’t have to be. The Indians are currently powerless.

With a chance to stay in the race in the season’s final week, Cleveland is collapsing.

Omar Infante’s two-run double in the fourth gave the Royals a 2-0 lead, and with the Indians’ offense sputtering, Ventura had more than enough cushion to notch his fifth win in six starts. He’s 7-1 with a 2.02 ERA in his last eight starts in the division.

In the fifth, Salazar, who struck out the side in the first two innings, got two quick outs before Eric Hosmer doubled and scored on Billy Butler’s double. Alex Gordon was walked intentionally and Perez drove in two with his shot to left-center, the ball just clearing lunging left fielder Michael Brantley’s glove.

Salazar was dominant in the early going, getting six strikeouts in the first two innings with each whiff coming on a wicked change-up that badly fooled the Royals hitters.

He escaped a threat in the third, but Salazar wasn’t so fortunate in the fourth, when he walked Butler and gave up a single to Gordon before Infante pulled his double into the left-field corner.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Indians: OF David Murphy has been limited to spot duty against right-handers as he deals with a nagging abdominal injury that landed him on the disabled list in August. Francona said Murphy isn’t 100 percent and that he’s trying to “be respectful of him” by not playing him too much.

UP NEXT

LHP Jason Vargas (11-10), who has recorded the AL’s third-lowest ERA (2.42) on the road, starts the series finale for the Royals, who oddly lost as the home team on Monday when they dropped a suspended game. Trevor Bauer (5-8) goes for the Indians, who have lost each of his past four starts after winning four in a row and five of six.

— Associated Press —

Former Tiger Jabari Brown signs with Los Angeles Lakers

riggertMizzouThe Los Angeles Lakers announced on Tuesday that they have signed former Mizzou Basketball standout Jabari Brown to their training camp roster.

The move allows Brown, the Southeastern Conference’s top scorer in 2013-14, to rejoin former Missouri teammate Jordan Clarkson in Los Angeles.

A native of Oakland, Calif., Brown averaged 19.9 points in 35 total games last season and paced the league with 20.7 points in 18 SEC contests. He topped 20 points in scoring 19 times overall as a junior, the most by a Tiger since Anthony Peeler in 1992. Brown scored 20-plus points in 12-of-18 league contests, the most since Derrick Chievous in 1987 and 1988, and topped 30 points twice, scoring 33 points against Kentucky and 30 points vs. Davidson.

While Brown was one of the SEC’s leading three-point shooters, the 6-foot-5 guard expanded his game greatly in his second season in Columbia. He shot 51.3 percent inside the three-point line and finished the year hitting 212-of-266 total free throws, ranking No. 3 all-time for single-season free throw makes.

Brown also ranked among the SEC’s leaders in several statistical categories during the 18-game league season. He finished among the Top 10 in scoring (first, 20.7), field goal percentage (fourth, .468), free throw percentage (fifth, .846), free throw makes (second, 115), three-point percentage (fourth, .414), three-point makes (eighth, 2.1) and minutes played (third, 36.6).

Brown was also the fifth fastest player to reach 1,000 points in Missouri history, needing just 59 games to reach the milestone. Through two seasons (60 total games at Missouri), Brown averaged 17.3 points, which ranks No. 10 all-time. The 19.9 points he averaged this season were the most since Kareem Rush in 2001.

Prior to signing with LA, Brown played for the Houston Rockets during the NBA’s Summer League in both Orlando and Las Vegas. During the Orlando Summer League (July 5-11) Brown averaged 9.4 points in 20.2 minutes.

— MU Sports Information —

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