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Willingham’s 3 RBIs lead Royals over former Twins team

RoyalsMINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Josh Willingham returned to Target Field and hit a bases-clearing double in Kansas City’s five-run fourth inning, and the surging Royals hung on to beat the Minnesota Twins 6-5 on Friday night.

Danny Dufy (8-10) allowed three runs in 5 1/3 innings to win his third straight start. Kansas City has won 11 of 12 and sits atop the AL Central.

Oswaldo Arcia hit an RBI double in the ninth and pinch-hitter Chris Parmelee drove him in with a groundout to cut the Royals’ lead to 6-5. But Greg Holland struck out Danny Santana for his 37th save in 39 chances.

After Minnesota took a 2-0 lead in the third, the first six Royals hitters reached base to start the fourth off Ricky Nolasco (5-8).

— Associated Press —

Lynn, Cardinals defeat San Diego for third straight win

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Lance Lynn pitched six strong innings and the St. Louis Cardinals defeated the San Diego Padres 4-2 Friday night for their third straight win.

Matt Adams, Kolten Wong and Oscar Taveras hit RBI singles for St. Louis. San Diego has lost two in a row after a five-game winning streak.

Lynn (13-8) gave up one run and six hits, striking out six and walking one. The Padres handed him a 3-1 defeat on July 29.

Reliever Pat Neshek posted his fourth save. Regular closer Trevor Rosenthal was given the night off after two successive appearances.

Pinch-hitter Yasmani Grandal homered with two outs in the Padres ninth. After Chris Nelson doubled, Neshek struck out Will Venable.

Tyson Ross (11-11) gave up three runs and five hits over six innings. He walked four and hit two batters.

Ross walked the first three batters in the first and Adam hit an RBI single. Jhonny Peralta followed with a run-scoring groundout.

Wong pushed the lead to 3-0 with an RBI single in the fourth. It was his team-high 27th RBI with two out.

San Diego climbed to within 3-1 on a double by Venable in the fifth. Lynn retired Tommy Medica and Seth Smith with runners on second and third to preserve the lead.

Taveras had a pinch-hit single in the eighth.

The Cardinals are 22-7 at home against San Diego since 2006.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City rallies past Oakland to win series

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Royals didn’t let Jarrod Dyson’s defensive miscue slow them down on Thursday.

Dyson drove in the tying run in a five-run seventh, while Nori Aoki and Billy Butler each drove in two runs and the surging Kansas City Royals rallied to defeat the Oakland Athletics 7-3.

The Royals have won 18 of 22 to move 12 games above .500 for the first time since July 20, 2003.

Dyson lost Josh Reddick’s fly ball in the sun in the sixth that gave Oakland two runs.

“I feel pretty good after redeeming myself,” Dyson said. “I lost the ball in the sun, so I had to make up for it, pick the team up and pick myself up. It was redeem myself or walk off the field. Which one?”

The Royals took the season series, winning five of seven against the Athletics, who have the best record in the majors.

“We feel pretty good ourselves,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “I think every (starting) pitcher we faced on this homestand has been an All-Star and to take six out of seven is pretty good. I’m happy with where we’re at.”

Aoki’s two-run triple put the Royals ahead 5-3. Butler’s single scored Aoki and Alcides Escobar. Dyson fouled off four consecutive pitches before hitting an RBI single to right for the first run of the inning.

Right-hander Jeff Samardzija (3-2) took the loss, giving up four runs, three earned, and eight hits in 6 2/3 innings.

“It happened quick,” Melvin said of Samardzjia’s giving up two hits in the seventh.

“Pitch-count wise, he was great. He had good life on his splitter and his fastball was great.”

He left with a 3-2 lead, but Ryan Cook failed to hold it, facing three batters and all scored. Cook’s streak of 21 consecutive scoreless innings ended.

“They’re capitalizing on mistakes right now,” Cook said. “That’s what a good ballclub does. I think we do that. They’re a good ballclub that’s also hot.”

Aaron Crow (6-1), the third of six Kansas City pitchers, picked up the victory, retiring the only batter he faced.

Starter James Shields gave up three runs and seven hits in six innings and has a 1.94 ERA in his past eight starts. Greg Holland earned the final two outs for his 36th save in 38 opportunities.

The A’s scored two runs in the sixth when Dyson lost Josh Reddick’s high fly in the sun for a triple, which scored Stephen Vogt.

“I felt real bad cause we had the lead and they came back and snatched the lead from us,” Dyson said.

Alberto Callaspo drove in two Oakland runs with a single and a sacrifice fly.

— Associated Press —

Jay’s 2-run double lifts Cardinals over Padres 4-3

CardsST. LOUIS (AP) — Pinch-hitter Jon Jay delivered a two-run double in the eighth inning and right fielder Shane Robinson threw out the potential tying run at the plate in the ninth to help the St. Louis Cardinals hold off the San Diego Padres 4-3 Thursday night.

Jhonny Peralta hit an early two-run homer for the Cardinals, who moved ahead of Pittsburgh into second place in the NL Central. St. Louis remained two games behind division-leading Milwaukee.

San Diego had its five-game winning streak snapped and fell to 16-9 since the All-Star break.

Trailing by two in the ninth, the Padres loaded the bases with one out against closer Trevor Rosenthal. Pinch-hitter Jake Goebbert came through with an RBI single to right, but Alexi Amarista was cut down at home when he tried to score from second.

The replay review lasted 4 minutes, 9 seconds. Padres manager Bud Black then was ejected for continuing to argue the call.

After a four-pitch walk to Will Venable loaded the bases again, Rosenthal struck out Tommy Medica for his 36th save in 40 opportunities.

San Diego reliever Alex Torres (1-1) appeared to strike out Tony Cruz leading off the eighth, but it was ruled Cruz foul-tipped the ball. Replays showed Cruz missed the pitch.

Given another chance, Cruz singled on the next delivery. Pinch-hitter Daniel Descalso walked on four pitches and Kolten Wong came in to run for Cruz. Matt Carpenter loaded the bases with a single to left.

Nick Vincent entered to face Jay, who went after the first pitch and drove a one-hop double off the wall in center to snap a 2-all tie. Jay is 5 for 17 with three RBIs as a pinch hitter. He has a six-game hitting streak with seven RBIs.

Seth Maness (4-2) earned the win with one spotless inning of relief.

Peralta hit his 16th home run to drive in Matt Adams, who led off the second with a single. That lifted Peralta into a tie with Edgar Renteria (2000) and Daryl Spencer (1960) for the St. Louis single-season record for home runs by a shortstop.

The Padres tied the score with two runs in the sixth after loading the bases with none out. Venable scored on a fielder’s choice. Medica, who had doubled, came home when Rymer Liriano beat out an infield single with two outs.

Both starters went seven innings.

Cardinals right-hander John Lackey improved on his last start in Baltimore that resulted in nine earned runs over five innings. Lackey allowed five hits and two runs with five strikeouts.

Eric Stults gave up two runs and four hits for San Diego. Stults has allowed three or fewer earned runs in nine of his last 10 starts.

— Associated Press —

Audio from Chiefs Training Camp practice – Thursday, Aug. 14

Chiefs Training Camp2The Kansas City Chiefs wrapped up the St. Joseph portion of their 2014 training camp as they had their final practice at Missouri Western State University on Thursday.  The Chiefs play at Carolina in their second preseason game Sunday and will return to Kansas City to resume their training camp.  Click the links below to listen to post-practice audio.

Head Coach Andy Reid

Training Camp report with “Voice of the Chiefs” Mitch Holthus

Royals bounce back behind Vargas’ 3-hitter against A’s

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The crowd roared as Jason Vargas emerged from the dugout for the ninth inning, the Kansas City Royals trying to hold onto a 3-0 lead over the Oakland Athletics in a matchup of playoff hopefuls.

Five pitches later, the crowd roared even louder.

Vargas finished off his three-hitter with a flourish, breezing through the A’s for his sixth career shutout. It was the second shutout by Kansas City starters in the past week and the third complete game over that stretch, a big reason why the Royals are leading the AL Central.

“That’s what we want to do if we want to keep playing,” said Vargas, who was making just his third start since going on the disabled list for an emergency appendectomy.

Vargas (9-5) retired the final 23 batters he faced, helping the Royals bounce back from having an eight-game winning streak snapped. They maintained their half-game lead over Detroit.

“If it’s the first pitch or sixth pitch, you’ve got to be ready for contact for a pitch to show up in your area,” said Josh Donaldson, who had one of the A’s three hits. “He did a good job of keeping us off balance all night.”

Omar Infante hit a two-run homer and Salvador Perez drove in the other run off Scott Kazmir (13-5), who lost to Kansas City for the second time in 10 days.

Vargas allowed four runs over 4 1/3 innings against Oakland in his first start off the disabled list, and two runs over five innings against San Francisco his last time out. But on a mild evening at the K, he looked like the dominant left-hander of earlier this season.

Mixing his pitches and catching the corners, Vargas wiggled out of a jam in the first inning and gave up a single leading off the second before muzzling Oakland the rest of the way.

Vargas needed only 92 pitches over eight innings, so manager Ned Yost sent him out for the ninth rather than turn it over to All-Star closer Greg Holland. Five pitches later, he had his first shutout since last September, when he beat Oakland 3-0 as a member of the Angels.

“He got back to being how he was,” Yost said.

Meanwhile, the Royals were giving Vargas more than enough offense.

After leaving runners on the corners in the first, Kansas City broke through in the third when Nori Aoki cracked a one-out single and Infante sent a 2-0 pitch into the left-field bullpen. It was his sixth homer of the season and his first since June 27.

The Royals left another runner on third in the fourth, but managed to manufacture a run in the fifth. Christian Colon led off with a single, Aoki laid down a sacrifice bunt and Infante managed to beat the throw on an infield single before Perez hit a lazy sacrifice fly to right field.

Kazmir wound up allowing seven hits and a walk over seven innings.

“You just have to keep after it,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said. “At times, you’re going to get well-pitched games against you and today was one of those. I don’t think our approach was any worse today than it was yesterday. It was counteracted by a guy that pitched a great game.”

— Associated Press —

St. Louis avoids sweep with 5-2 win at Miami

CardsMIAMI (AP) — R&B blared in the St. Louis Cardinals’ postgame clubhouse, making conversation difficult, and Justin Masterson reached over to the stereo and turned down the volume so he could talk about his latest outing.

Masterson did it all Wednesday- pitching, hitting and monitoring the music after St. Louis beat the Miami Marlins 5-2.

The former Indians ace earned his first career RBI in the sixth with a two-out single. But he was more excited about pitching seven scoreless innings in his best outing since being acquired in a trade with Cleveland on July 30.

“I pray to the good lord that this is on the right path,” said Masterson, who has struggled for much of the season. “I felt very comfortable. The ball was coming out well and it was heavy. And it was going at guys; that’s nice, too.”

The 6-foot-6 sinkerballer recorded 12 outs on groundballs. He also bounced a grounder through the Miami infield for his RBI, and when asked if he got the ball as a souvenir, he laughed.

“I got a W,” he said. “It’s much better for the team than the ball.”

Masterson improved to 2-1 with St. Louis and 5-6 overall. He allowed three hits — all singles — and no walks and threw only 91 pitches before departing for a pinch hitter.

After recording only six outs in his previous start, he lowered his ERA to 6.00 in three outings with the Cardinals, and 5.14 overall this year.

“Today was just a great sign of the kind of pitcher he can be when he gets it all put together,” manager Mike Matheny said. “It couldn’t have happened at a better time.”

The Marlins were going for their first three-game sweep of the Cardinals since 1996, but they didn’t get a runner to second base until the ninth.

“Absolutely we wanted to get greedy and try to go for the sweep,” Casey McGehee said. “But Masterson threw the ball well.”

Miami walked in a run and allowed two unearned runs on a pair of errors by second baseman Jordany Valdespin. Nathan Eovaldi (6-7) allowed four runs, two earned, in six innings.

Jeff Baker hit a two-run homer for the Marlins, but NL home run and RBI leader Giancarlo Stanton went 0 for 4 with two strikeouts.

The Cardinals won despite going 2 for 11 with runners in scoring position. They were 4 for 26 in those situations in the series, which made a two-out, two-run single by Matt Adams in the third inning especially welcome.

“Somebody in the dugout yelled real loud, `Hey, we got the lead,” Matheny said. “That was a nice change of pace.”

Masterson made the early advantage stand up.

“You get two or three runs and you can challenge guys and go after them,” he said.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City’s streak ends at eight as they get blown out by A’s

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Oakland Athletics’ combination of Jon Lester and Josh Donaldson was too much for the Kansas City Royals.

Lester pitched six strong innings and Donaldson homered twice and drove in four runs as the Athletics won 11-3 Tuesday night, snapping the Royals’ eight-game winning streak.

Lester (13-7) has won all three of his starts since joining the A’s in a trade from Boston in a deadline deal on July 31 that sent All-Star outfielder Yoenis Cespedes to the Red Sox. Lester struck out nine and allowed three runs on six hits and two walks.

The timing of the trade was bad for the Royals, having to face Lester twice in 10 days.

“I’d rather face Cespedes four times in a game than face Lester one game,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “That’s just me. That’s not taking anything away from Cespedes. He can beat you with one swing of the bat.”

The Royals have won 11 of 13, with both losses coming against Lester — who improved to 9-3 with a 1.84 ERA in 13 career starts against Kansas City.

Donaldson homered in the seventh and eighth off left-hander Bruce Chen for his third multihomer game of the season. He also added an RBI double in the first and a sacrifice fly in the fifth.

“It helps when you have contributors up and down the lineup,” Donaldson said. “We believe that it’s going to happen more times than not. We had some balls that were hit hard for outs, and then we had a lot of balls that fell in for us tonight.”

Brandon Moss had four hits, matching his career high, as the A’s finished with a season-high 20 hits.

“He looked like Wade Boggs up there,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said.

Royals starter Jeremy Guthrie (8-10) allowed six runs on 11 hits in 4 2/3 innings.

“Obviously, we would have loved to gone out there and had a better performance from myself and the pitchers to keep us in the game,” Guthrie said. “We play 162 of these and you take them for what it’s worth. They strung together a bunch of hits and they had a tough pitcher and won the game.”

Salvador Perez and Lorenzo Cain doubled in the Royals’ three-run fifth.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals get blanked by Miami, 3-0

CardsMIAMI (AP) — The drive down the left-field line took a surprising path, clanging off the foul pole for a homer by a batter who rarely hits them against a pitcher who rarely gives them up.

That narrow margin loomed large because of the way Jarred Cosart pitched against Adam Wainwright. Cosart went seven innings Tuesday to earn his first victory for the Miami Marlins, who beat Wainwright and the St. Louis Cardinals 3-0.

Wainwright (14-7) missed a chance to become the first 15-game winner in the majors. He went seven innings and allowed three runs, with two coming on a fourth-inning home run by Donovan Solano — only the sixth homer allowed by the Cardinals’ ace.

“I thought for sure the ball was going foul,” Solano said.

He wasn’t the only one.

“That ball was 10 feet foul and it came back fair. It was just the craziest ball flight I’ve ever seen,” Wainwright said. “He thought it was foul, the umpire thought it was foul, I thought it was foul, everyone in the park thought it was foul. And then the ball started having this ball flight back to the pole, and it ended up hitting the pole. You can’t do anything about that.”

It was stunner coming against Wainwright, who began the game with the best innings-to-homers ratio among all major league starters. The homer was Solano’s first ever at Marlins Park in 133 games.

His only other homer this year came against another All-Star, David Price.

“You can book Donovan for every ace in the league from here on out,” Marlins manager Mike Redmond said with a giggle.

Cosart allowed three hits and one walk to win for the first time since July 7. The victory came in his second start for Miami after being acquired from Houston in a trade for prospects.

“I think that’s why I got traded — they had confidence in my ability that I can help this team,” Cosart said. “I have the utmost confidence in my own ability that I can come in here and help these guys win games and help make a playoff push.”

He’s 1-1 with the Marlins and 10-7 overall this year.

Casey McGehee led off the Marlins’ fourth and hustled for a double when left fielder Matt Holliday was slow getting the ball back into the infield. Jarrod Saltalamacchia singled home the game’s first run, and Solano pulled an inside sinker for his homer.

“I think I got so caught up trying to stuff it in there that I didn’t juice it like I wanted to,” Wainwright said. “That may be why he got to it. You’ve got to tip your hat sometimes. It obviously looks ridiculously stupid that I gave up a two-run homer there, but the sad thing is it probably wouldn’t have mattered because their guys pitched very good and we didn’t score.”

— Associated Press —

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