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Royals lose to Seattle on Morales’ HR in the 9th inning

RoyalsKendrys Morales had the big hit in the ninth inning, but the spotlight was on Taijuan Walker, the Seattle Mariners’ young right-handed starter.

Morales hit a two-run homer with two outs in the ninth inning to lift the Mariners to a 6-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday night.

Morales hit his 18th home run to straight away center on a 1-2 pitch from Aaron Crow (7-5) with Franklin Gutierrez, who had walked, aboard.

The Royals used eight pitchers, tying a club record for a nine-inning game.

Walker, who became the youngest Mariners starting pitcher (21 years, 17 days) to pick up a victory in his major league debut on Friday at Houston, struck out two in the first inning, his fastball touching 97 mph.

The 6-foot-5 Walker, who was a basketball star in high school with a 21-point average, did not allow a hit over the first three innings, but yielded four runs, four hits, a walk and a sacrifice fly in the fourth to tie the score.

Manager Eric Wedge opted to send Walker out for the fifth and he responded with a 1-2-3 inning.

”In the fourth, he just came up in the zone a little bit,” Wedge said. ”I was glad to see him get through it. And then I was really happy to see him out there in the fifth and pitch another inning for us. I felt it was important to go out in the fifth. That proves something to him. We know he can do it.

”I love his repertoire of pitches and the way he works, his cutter and his breaking ball off his fastball. The changeup will continue to come, too.”

Walker was glad to get a chance to return for another inning.

”I thought the fifth inning was real big for me,” Walker said. ”I wanted to have a clean inning and keep my team in the game. I was a little shocked I was going back out because they are monitoring my innings and it was a close game. I’m glad he sent me back out and I’m glad to go out and have a clean inning.”

Walker threw 79 pitches.

”You can see what all the hype was about,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”He’s got a free and easy power arm. He’s a good talent.”

Lucas Luetge (1-2) worked two perfect innings to earn the victory. Danny Farquhar worked a perfect ninth for his 12th save in 15 opportunities.

”You’ve got different options there,” Yost said of Morales’ homer. ”You can go down and away, bust him inside or go back foot. You just don’t want to go there. But it wasn’t Morales as much as Gutierrez. That’s the guy you want to go for there so you don’t get to Morales.”

Crow had Gutierrez down in the count 1-2 before walking him.

”I’ve got to put him away there and Morales doesn’t get up,” Crow said. ”I just left it up to Morales and it hurts more so because the home run lost us the ballgame.”

Jarrod Dyson’s two-out, two-run single made it 4-4 in the fourth, but that was it for the Kansas City offense. Salvador Perez’s sacrifice fly scored Eric Hosmer, who had singled for the first Kansas City hit. Billy Butler singled home Emilo Bonifacio, who led off the inning with a walk, for the first run.

The Mariners, who had scored just four runs in losing their previous three games, scored four runs in the first four innings and chased Royals right-hander Ervin Santana.

Gutierrez’s single in the third scored Nick Franklin, who had doubled. Brad Miller’s sacrifice fly scored Mike Zunino with the first run.

The Mariners made it 4-0 in the third. Franklin laced an RBI-single to center, while Dustin Ackley scored on a wild pitch by Wade Davis.

Santana failed to make it through the fourth, charged with four runs, seven hits and three walks in 3 1-3 innings, his briefest outing of the year.

— Associated Press —

Adams’ home run sends Cards to win over Reds in 16 innings

CardsMatt Adams’ second homer sent St. Louis to a 5-4 victory over the Cincinnati Reds in 16 innings on Wednesday night, protecting the Cardinals’ hold on second place in the NL Central.

Adams broke an 0-for-17 slump by connecting in the 14th. After St. Louis let that lead get away, he homered again off Logan Ondrusek (3-1), ending the Reds’ longest game of the season.

The Cardinals had dropped the first two games in the series, letting the Reds get within a game and a half for second place. They finish their season series on Thursday. St. Louis leads it 11-8.

Carlos Martinez (2-1) escaped a threat in the 15th, when Shin-Soo Choo reached third with two outs but was caught in a rundown.

The Cardinals have dropped five of seven overall, costing them precious ground in the division’s three-team race. The Pirates, Cardinals and Reds are all in good shape to make the playoffs – one as a champion, the other two as wild cards.

St. Louis wasted a chance to put it away in the 14th inning.

Adams broke his deep slump by leading off with homer off Alfredo Simon. Speedy Billy Hamilton helped the Reds tie it with another stolen base in the bottom of the inning.

Hamilton ran for Ryan Ludwick after his single off Edward Mujica, who blew a save chance for only the third time in 38 chances. Hamilton stole second – he’s 2 for 2 against catcher Yadier Molina – and scored easily on Zack Cozart’s single.

Leadoff hitter Matt Carpenter had three hits and a walk, scoring twice. Carpenter has five of the Cardinals’ 14 hits in the last two games.

Bronson Arroyo broke with his history of subpar showings against the Cardinals. It was his 38th career start against St. Louis – more than against any other team – and he didn’t have a lot to show for it, going 0-3 against the Cardinals this season and 8-16 in his career.

He went seven innings and allowed three runs – two earned – giving the Reds chances that they squandered.

St. Louis scored twice in the fourth, when Matt Holliday hit a sacrifice fly and Carlos Beltran came around on a throwing error by first baseman Joey Votto on Allen Craig’s grounder.

Craig sprained his left foot while rounding the base on the play and left the game. He’ll be examined again on Thursday.

Brandon Phillips led off the fifth with his 18th homer, giving him 100 RBIs. He’s the first Reds second baseman to reach the mark since Hall of Famer Joe Morgan drove in 111 in 1976, when the Reds swept the Yankees for their second straight World Series championship.

— Associated Press —

Perez leads Kansas City past Seattle, 4-3

RoyalsSalvador Perez drove in Mike Moustakas with two outs in the eighth inning, and the Kansas City Royals survived after blowing a three-run lead to beat the Seattle Mariners 4-3 on Tuesday night.

Billy Butler had just grounded into a double play against Seattle reliever Yoervis Medina (4-4) when Moustakas legged out a double to center in the eighth. Perez followed with a single to left, and Moustakas had just enough time for a headfirst slide ahead of Endy Chavez’s throw to home.

Luke Hochevar (4-2) got two outs earlier in the eighth to leave runners stranded on second and third, and Greg Holland pitched a perfect ninth for his 31st straight save and 38th on the year.

Perez also homered and finished with three hits for the Royals, who have won three straight and eight of their last 10 to climb back into AL wild-card contention. Alex Gordon also hit a solo shot and Billy Butler drove in a run for Kansas City.

Kyle Seager hit a two-run shot for the Mariners, who have lost three straight.

The Royals took the lead on the first pitch of the game, which Gordon sent sailing over the outfield wall for the 12th leadoff homer of his career. The shot broke a tie with David DeJesus and Willie Wilson for the most leadoff home runs in franchise history.

Perez made it 2-0 with his solo shot in the fourth inning, and the Royals manufactured another run in the fifth. Emilio Bonifacio followed up his base hit by swiping second, and then came home when Butler hit a grounder through the left side of the infield.

That was all Seattle starter Erasmo Ramirez allowed in 6 1-3 innings. After getting recalled from Triple-A Tacoma, Ramirez scattered seven hits and three walks while striking out three.

Bruce Chen was just as stingy for the Royals early in the game.

The soft-tossing left-hander allowed four weak singles through the first five innings before Franklin Gutierrez ripped a crisp base hit to lead off the sixth. Seager followed with his home run to right field, which cleared the visiting bullpen and landed deep in the seats.

Seattle tied the game up in the seventh inning. Royals reliever Kelvin Herrera gave up a pair of singles, and Brad Miller’s groundout off relief pitcher Tim Collins knotted the game 3-all.

The Mariners threatened again when they put runners on second and third with one out against Collins in the eighth inning. Hochevar struck out Mike Zunino and got Chavez on a fly ball to center to end the inning, and walked off the field to a standing ovation.

— Associated Press —

Chiefs make more roster moves Tuesday

riggertChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Tuesday that the club has signed safety Bradley McDougald to the 53-man roster and placed safety Sanders Commings on injured reserve with a designation for return. Additionally, the team has signed offensive guard Rishawn Johnson to the practice squad roster.

McDougald (6-1, 209) originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Chiefs in 2013. He played in 47 games (33 starts) at the University of Kansas, seeing action on both sides of the ball. He recorded 194 tackles (148 solo), 16 tackles for a loss, 2.0 sacks, six interceptions and three forced fumbles. He also had 52 catches for 558 yards (10.7 avg.) with one touchdown and six rushes for 31 yards. He prepped at Scioto High School in Columbus, Ohio, earning second-team all-district honors.

Commings (6-0, 223) joined the Chiefs as the club’s fifth-round pick (134th overall) in the 2013 NFL Draft. He appeared in 54 games (35 starts) at Georgia, recording 154 tackles (113 solo), 1.0 sack (-7.0 yards), six tackles for loss, three QB pressures, one forced fumble and three fumble recoveries. He added eight interceptions and 17 passes defensed. Commings was a multi-sport standout at Westside High School in Augusta, Ga. While in high school, he was drafted by the Arizona Diamondbacks in the 37th round of the 2008 MLB Amateur Draft.

Johnson (6-3, 313) originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Seattle Seahawks in April of 2012. He served primarily on the Seahawks practice squad during his rookie season before being released by Seattle on Aug. 31, 2013. He played collegiately at California University of Pennsylvania and was a teammate of current Chiefs center Eric Kush. Johnson was voted a team captain for the Vulcans and was a first-team All-American in 2011 after playing the previous three seasons at Ole Miss. He prepped at Hammond High School in Hammond, La.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Cardinals lose second straight at Cincinnati

CardsThe dirt-smudged base leaned on the floor in front of Billy Hamilton’s locker. An inscription in black ink noted the importance: ”MLB Debut 9/3/13.”

Some debut!

The speedy outfielder who outran everything in the minors got his first stolen base in the majors on Tuesday night, and it decided a game with playoff implications. Hamilton swiped second and came around on Todd Frazier’s double in the seventh inning, sending the Cincinnati Reds to a 1-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals.

”That’s my job – stealing in important situations,” said Hamilton, who had brown dirt on both knees from his hard slide into that keepsake base. ”This was a real big situation – a pennant race.”

Hamilton set a professional record by swiping 155 bases in the minors last year. He got an ovation when he made his big league debut as a pinch runner for Ryan Ludwick, who led off the seventh with a single against Seth Maness (5-2).

As he went onto the field, manager Dusty Baker had a word.

”He said, ‘I need you to get to second base,”’ Hamilton said. ”I was like, ‘OK, I got you.”’

The 20,219 fans in the stands and everyone on the field and in the dugouts knew what was coming. Hamilton was about to test one of the toughest catchers in the game. Could he outrun catcher Yadier Molina’s throw?

”We knew that this guy’s electric,” said Frazier, who was at bat. ”I didn’t even know he was going. I saw it out of the corner of my eye and said, ‘Here we go, here’s the challenge.”’

After Maness threw to first three times, Hamilton took off and beat an off-target throw from Molina, who rushed a bit.

”That guy’s the best,” Baker said. ”He’ll throw you out. He was close to throwing Billy out there. The throw was a little high and wide. That’s what happens when you have speed.”

The Cardinals had watched video of Hamilton to get ready for his debut.

”He was just another baserunner,” Maness said. ”We know he’s fast, but you treat him no different. Get the ball to the plate quick and make the throw.

”It was a bang-bang play. That’s baseball.”

Hamilton scored easily on Frazier’s hit and got congratulatory slaps in the dugout.

”It was like we won the World Series there,” Hamilton said.

Homer Bailey (10-10) allowed only two hits in seven innings, retiring his last 14 batters. Aroldis Chapman threw four pitches that registered 103 mph while fanning the heart of the Cardinals’ order in the ninth for his 34th save in 39 chances, completing the two-hitter.

The Cardinals were shut out for the third time in their last six games.

By taking the first two in the four-game series, the Reds snapped the Cardinals’ streak of winning seven straight series between the NL Central rivals. St. Louis is 10-7 against Cincinnati this season.

The head-to-head opportunities are dwindling. Second-place St. Louis is a game and a half ahead of Cincinnati. The Cardinals host the division-leading Pirates for three games next weekend, completing their season series. The Reds play Pittsburgh six times in their last nine games.

The trio has been in a tight pack atop the division most of the season. Currently, all three are in position to make the playoffs.

And now, the Reds have a new way to win a close game.

”Watching Billy run – I can watch that every day,” Frazier said.

They considered calling up the 22-year-old Hamilton last September, but decided he wasn’t ready. A year later, he made good on his first steal attempt and decided a game full of tough pitching and sensational defense.

Michael Wacha, the Cardinals’ top draft pick last year out of Texas A&M, made his fifth career start and blanked the Reds on three hits through six innings.

The Cardinals’ lineup was back to full strength. Carlos Beltran was back in right field after missing two games with a sore back. Molina was back in the lineup after leaving Monday’s game with a sore left wrist.

Bailey is in a good stretch, winning his last five decisions. He held the Cardinals to five hits over 7 1-3 innings during a 10-0 win in St. Louis last Wednesday.

Bailey escaped an early threat. Matt Carpenter opened the game with a single, and Bailey walked Beltran on four pitches, bringing up Matt Holliday. The left fielder has a .375 career average against Bailey, but struck out swinging. Allen Craig grounded into a double play.

Defense had a lot to do with keeping this one close. No surprise there – St. Louis has the fewest errors in the NL, Cincinnati the third-fewest.

— Associated Press —

Smith picks up Duffy as Royals top Mariners, 3-1

RoyalsIt was a rough day for Danny Duffy. Fortunately for the Kansas City Royals, Will Smith was terrific.

Smith replaced Duffy in the fourth inning and had a career-high eight strikeouts in a dominant relief performance, helping Kansas City beat the Seattle Mariners 3-1 on Monday.

Smith (2-1) allowed one hit in 4 1-3 innings. He finished with the most strikeouts by a Royals reliever since Tom Gordon struck out eight over 4 2-3 innings against Detroit on July 9, 1993.

”Will was phenomenal, outstanding, great,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”Man, what a job he did. It was evident from some of the swings they were taking they just had a real hard time picking up the ball. His pitches had action, deception and location.”

While Smith shined, Seattle ace Felix Hernandez lost his fourth consecutive start. The ace right-hander allowed three runs and six hits in 6 2-3 innings.

Hernandez departed after his back cramped up while he was pitching to Alex Gordon.

”The second pitch to Gordon I felt it cramping,” Hernandez said. ”It’s just a cramp. It’ll be OK.”

Mariners manager Eric Wedge said trainer Rick Griffin told him he did not think it was serious.

Five of Smith’s strikeouts took only three pitches. Kyle Seager, who had three of the Mariners’ seven hits, doubled off Smith with two out in the seventh, but it was a fly ball that center fielder Jarrod Dyson lost in the sun.

”The slider was working and the curveball, too,” Smith said. ”It’s one of those days where everything was clicking. I just kept putting zeros up.”

Greg Holland pitched a one-hit ninth for his 37th save in 39 opportunities.

The Royals scored two runs in the fifth to open a 3-1 lead. Dyson led off with an infield single and advanced to third on Alcides Escobar’s hit-and-run single to right. Dyson scored on a wild pitch, and Escobar came home Emilio Bonifacio’s sacrifice fly.

”Speed can do a lot,” Dyson said.

Hernandez (12-9), who has a 7.84 ERA in his losing streak, struck out Mike Moustakas in the sixth to reach 200 strikeouts for the fifth straight season.

Duffy, who had elbow surgery last year, departed after 3 2-3 innings and 91 pitches. He was charged with one run and five hits with four walks and four strikeouts.

”I didn’t have it today,” Duffy said.

Seattle got its run when Brad Miller drove in Abraham Almonte with a two-out triple in the fourth.

The Royals tied it on consecutive singles by Eric Hosmer, Billy Butler and Moustakas in the bottom half.

”It was tough luck,” Hernandez said. ”A lot of ground balls to the outfield, it happens. I commanded the fastball better.”

Duffy threw 68 pitches in the first three innings and stranded six runners. He struck out Kendrys Morales and Justin Smoak swinging to end the first with two runners on.

Michael Saunders led off the second with a bunt single and Duffy walked Mike Zunino on nine pitches before retiring the next three batters.

The Mariners went 1 for 11 with runners in scoring position and stranded 10 runners.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis drops series opener at Cincinnati

CardsOne very bad and very short day in St. Louis, followed by another bad game in Cincinnati. Adam Wainwright doesn’t understand why he’s having a really tough time getting the Reds out.

Shin-Soo Choo and Joey Votto homered on Monday as Cincinnati roughed up Wainwright for the second start in a row, and Mat Latos went the distance for the first time this season in a 7-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals.

Latos (14-5) credited an offense that seems to have Wainwright’s number.

”It doesn’t matter who we’re playing, but there’s definitely more of an anxiety added when you have a guy like Wainwright,” said Latos, who allowed four hits. ”We were fortunate to be able to get to him today.”

Fortunate? Or maybe they’ve figured him out?

”I don’t know about that,” said Ryan Ludwick, who singled home a run. ”I think we’ve gotten some pitches to hit the last two outings we’ve faced him, and we’ve done damage.”

Latos gave up a pair of singles and a sacrifice fly by Matt Holliday in his fourth career complete game.

The third-place Reds are trying to end the Cardinals’ season-long dominance during their four-game series at Great American Ball Park. St. Louis has won the last seven series between the teams and is 10-6 against Cincinnati this year.

”It starts at one,” Reds manager Dusty Baker said. ”Hopefully this is just a beginning because we’ve got a lot of work to do, a long way to go.”

The Cardinals took two of three in St. Louis last week, the only loss coming when the Reds tagged Wainwright (15-9) for nine runs in a career-low two innings. They hit him hard again on Monday, piling up six runs and 10 hits in six innings.

Wainwright isn’t sure what’s going on with him and the Reds.

”The last time, it was a matter of me leaving too many ball in the middle of the plate,” Wainwright said. ”Today, they hit some good pitches. I feel very strong. I’ve had some good games against them in the past. It’s a head-scratcher, to be honest with you.”

It’s an important series for Cincinnati, which now trails the Cardinals by 2 1/2 games. St. Louis opened the day tied with Pittsburgh for first place. The Reds maintain a comfortable lead for the final NL wild-card spot.

The last time the Cardinals visited Great American Ball Park, they won by scores of 13-3 and 15-2 during a one-sided series that left the Reds embarrassed. This one started much better for them.

Wainwright fell to 5-9 career against Cincinnati. In his last two starts against the Reds, the right-hander has given up 18 hits and 15 runs in only eight innings. He’s 1-3 in four starts against Cincinnati this season with a 7.77 ERA.

”That’s a real good pitcher,” Baker said. ”We have nothing but respect for Wainwright. He’s not the guy that you would exactly choose to face twice a week. It’s a funny game.”

Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina came out of the game in the fifth inning because of a sore left wrist. He was activated off the 15-day disabled list on Aug. 15 after missing 14 games with a sore right knee.

The Reds quickly got to Wainwright. Choo opened the first with a single and scored on Ludwick’s two-out single. Ludwick missed more than three months with torn cartilage in his right shoulder, but the left fielder is starting to get his swing back in shape. Ludwick has driven in a run in each of his last four games.

Zack Cozart singled home a run in the second, and Choo’s two-run homer made it 4-0. Choo leads all major league leadoff hitters with 19 homers. He has three homers during a six-game hitting streak, which includes four multihit games.

Votto hit an up-and-away 1-2 pitch to the opposite field in left for his 21st homer in the fourth inning.

— Associated Press —

Shields helps Kansas City avoid sweep at Toronto

RoyalsThe Kansas City Royals won’t have much hope in the wild-card race without a strong September from veteran pitcher James Shields.

One game into the regular season’s final month, he’s off to an excellent start.

Shields pitched seven innings of three-hit ball to win his fourth straight decision, Eric Hosmer drove in two runs and the Royals beat the Toronto Blue Jays 5-0 on Sunday to avoid a three-game sweep.

”It just seems like he’s getting stronger and stronger as the year goes on,” manager Ned Yost said of Shields, who went 4-1 in August.

The Royals, who entered play 6 1/2 games behind Tampa Bay in the race for the second AL wild-card berth, won for the sixth time in eight games.

”We’re fighting right now,” Shields said. ”Today was a big game.”

Twelve of Kansas City’s final 26 games are against Cleveland and Detroit, the two teams ahead of them in the AL Central.

Shields, who played on the Tampa Bay team that overturned a nine-game deficit in the final month to reach the 2011 playoffs, understands that ”anything can happen.”

”We’ve got a lot of games against Detroit, we’ve got a lot of games against Cleveland left,” Shields said. ”We’ve got some room to catch up.”

Outfielder Jarrod Dyson said the Royals remain confident that a postseason spot is within their grasp.

”We’re still pushing for it,” Dyson said. ”We’re not going to let up. We’re going to give it all we’ve got.”

Hosmer had two hits and two RBIs. It was his 51st multihit game of the season, tying him with five other players for the major league lead.

Former Blue Jays infielder Emilio Bonifacio had two hits, scored twice and stole two bases for the Royals. He’s 11 for 11 in stolen base attempts since joining Kansas City on Aug. 14.

Shields (10-8) improved to 4-0 with a 1.53 ERA in his past five starts. The right-hander walked one and matched a season-high with nine strikeouts.

”I was mixing my pitches up as well as I can and trying to keep them off balance,” Shields said.

In shutting down the Blue Jays, Shields also extended his recent run of road success. He’s 7-0 with a 1.71 ERA in his past eight starts away from home, and 8-3 with a 2.11 ERA in 16 total road outings.

”He’s always tough,” Toronto shortstop Jose Reyes said of Shields. ”He’s one of the best pitchers in the game. When his team scores some runs early, he’s going to get tougher and tougher.”

Luke Hochevar worked the eighth and Greg Holland finished as the Royals recorded their 10th shutout of the season.

Shields set down the first 11 batters in order before Edwin Encarnacion singled in the fourth. Adam Lind followed with a walk but Brett Lawrie grounded out.

Kansas City took the lead in the first when Bonifacio walked, stole second, went to third on catcher J.P. Arencibia’s throwing error and scored on Eric Hosmer’s grounder.

The Royals benefited from an interference call in a four-run, bat-around third. Dyson led off with a single and stole second, but appeared to be caught in a rundown after trying to advance on Alcides Escobar’s grounder. But Reyes was called for interference after Dyson ran into him.

”I wasn’t going to stop right there and just let him tag me because he was in my way,” Dyson said.

Even though Dyson was initially ruled out, Reyes said he was waiting for another ump to overturn the call.

”Kind of a tough day,” Reyes said. ”I didn’t mean to do that.”

The call putting runners at the corners for Alex Gordon, who hit an RBI single. Bonifacio followed with an RBI single and stole second before Hosmer hit a two-run single to right.

”It was a play that helped us break that inning open a little bit,” Yost said of Dyson’s escape. ”It worked out great.”

Rajai Davis hit a one-out triple in the fifth but Shields fanned Anthony Gose and Kevin Pillar to end the threat.

Blue Jays left-hander J.A. Happ (3-5) lost his third straight start, allowing five runs, three earned, and six hits in four innings. He walked one and struck out three.

”He was kind of in and out of the zone a little bit,” Blue Jays manager John Gibbons said. ”It’s a consistency thing.”

Toronto second baseman Ryan Goins went 0 for 4 with two strikeouts, snapping an eight-game hitting streak to start his career.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City makes more roster moves Sunday

riggertChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced several roster transactions on Sunday including the claiming of seven players off waivers: CB Marcus Cooper, WR Chad Hall, DT Jaye Howard, TE Sean McGrath, LB James-Michael Johnson, LB Dezman Moses and CB Ron Parker.

Additionally, the team has waived/released the following six players: TE Kevin Brock, CB Jalil Brown, LB Zac Diles, S Bradley McDougald, DT Jerrell Powe and WR Devon Wylie.

Cooper (6-2, 192) originally entered the NFL as a seventh-round draft pick (252nd overall) of the San Francisco 49ers in the 2013 NFL Draft. He played collegiately at Rutgers where he saw action in 30 games, recording 46 tackles, one fumble recovery and three passes defensed. Cooper also saw time as a receiver and on the school’s special teams units. He prepped at Bloomfield High School in Bloomfield, Conn.

Hall (5-8, 187) has appeared in 15 games (one start) in two seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles (2010-11), recording 14 receptions for 135 yards (9.6 avg.) with two touchdowns and adding 12 carries for 42 yards (3.5 avg.). He has returned 10 punts for 107 yards (10.7 avg.) and six kickoffs for 108 yards (18.0 avg.). He spent portions of the 2012 season on the San Francisco practice squad and went to training camp in 2013 with 49ers before being released. He originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Eagles in 2010. Hall was a three-year letterman at the Air Force Academy and prepped at Wesleyan School in Norcross, Ga.

Howard (6-3, 301) played in two contests his rookie season with the Seattle Seahawks in 2012. He originally entered the NFL as a fourth-round selection (114th overall) of the Seahawks in the 2012 NFL Draft. Howard played collegiately at Florida where he saw action in 45 games (25 starts), collecting 131 tackles (80 solo), 25.5 tackles for loss, 11.0 sacks, two pass breakups and three fumble recoveries. He prepped at Jones High School in Orlando, Fla.

Johnson (6-1, 240) appeared in 10 games (eight starts) for the Cleveland Browns in 2012, recording 32 tackles (17 solo) and three special teams stops before being placed on injured reserve with an oblique injury. He originally entered the league as a fourth-round draft pick (120th overall) of the Cleveland Browns in the 2012 NFL Draft out of Nevada. At Nevada, he started 50 of the 54 games he played in. A native of Fairfield, Calif., Johnson prepped at Rodriguez High School.

McGrath (6-5, 247) played in two games his rookie season with the Seattle Seahawks in 2012. He originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with Seattle in 2012. He spent the majority of the 2012 season on the Seahawks practice squad roster. McGrath played collegiately at Henderson State (2010-11) and Eastern Illinois (2008) seeing action in 29 career games, tallying 89 catches for 1,018 yards (11.4 avg.) with seven touchdowns. He prepped at Carmel Catholic High School in Mundelein, Ill.

Moses (6-2, 249) played in all 16 games (six starts) for the Green Bay Packers in 2012, registering 24 tackles (12 solo), 4.0 sacks (-10.0 yards), two passes defensed and one forced fumble. He played in two postseason games (one start) with the Packers, recording six tackles and one fumble recovery. He originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with Green Bay in 2012. He played his final two years of collegiate football at Tulane after beginning his career at the University of Iowa. A native of Mount Holly, N.J., Moses prepped at Willingboro (N.J.) High School.

Parker (6-0, 206) has played in 10 games in two NFL seasons with the Seattle Seahawks (2011, 2012), Oakland Raiders (2011) and Carolina Panthers (2012). He originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Seahawks in 2011. Parker attended Newberry College, where he notched 178 tackles, 11 interceptions, 11 passes defensed, two forced fumbles and one fumble recovery.  He prepped at Beaufort High School in Beaufort, S.C.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Cardinals salvage series finale against Pirates

CardsJoe Kelly began the season in the St. Louis Cardinals’ bullpen with an electric fastball and an identity crisis.

Consider the crisis solved.

At the moment, Kelly has become The Stopper.

The right-hander allowed four hits over six solid innings to win his fourth straight start and the Cardinals moved back into a tie for first place in the NL Central with a 7-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sunday.

Kelly (7-3) walked two and struck out five while remaining unbeaten since being moved to the starting rotation full-time in July.

”He’s kind of figured himself out,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. ”Early in the season, he was confused. He thought he should be a strikeout guy at 97 (mph), but with the movement on his fastball he’d be crazy not to use that movement to try to command the bottom of the zone and get ground balls, too.”

Kelly received plenty of help from an offense that snapped out of a three-game funk by tagging Pittsburgh spot starter Kris Johnson (0-2).

Matt Holliday and David Freese drove in two runs apiece while Matt Carpenter, Allen Craig, Yadier Molina and Shane Robinson added two hits each for St. Louis.

The Cardinals managed all of one run over the first 18 innings of the series, losses that came at the hands of proven veterans Francisco Liriano and A.J. Burnett. On Sunday they faced a 28-year-old making his first major league start who was nearly out of baseball two years ago.

”For us to come back out in a day game after scoring one run the first two nights was really big,” Freese said. ”It finally gave us a little momentum.”

Pittsburgh’s push for an NL Central title could go down to the wire. The Pirates reclaimed first place with a 7-1 victory Saturday night but St. Louis responded by knocking around Johnson, who took the hill after Pittsburgh manager Clint Hurdle decided to give struggling All-Star Jeff Locke a much-needed breather.

Locke is 1-2 with a 6.88 ERA in the second half, and Hurdle thought a few days off would allow the left-hander to work on his mechanics and get some rest.

Locke won’t pitch again until next weekend at the earliest. If Pittsburgh decides he needs even more time off, it will likely have to look elsewhere for help after the Cardinals took it to Johnson.

Carpenter doubled to open the game and Robinson followed with a walk. Craig and Molina provided consecutive RBI singles, and Jon Jay added a sacrifice fly to stake Kelly to a 3-0 lead before he threw his first pitch.

The advantage grew in the third when Freese doubled to score Craig and Molina and end Johnson’s day. Two weeks after limiting Arizona to one run in six innings of relief in his first major league appearance, Johnson gave up five runs on seven hits in two-plus innings.

”These are the kind of situations you want to be put in, I just didn’t take advantage of them when I had the chance,” Johnson said. ”I worked all my life to get here and to fall short today, just going to have to get back on the field, get back on the throwing program and get back to where we were before.”

Justin Morneau went 1 for 3 in his debut with the Pirates a day after Pittsburgh acquired the first baseman from Minnesota to bolster the franchise’s bid for its first playoff appearance in 21 years.

Kelly has been a pleasant surprise since moving into the rotation. He never let the Pirates in the game, allowing only an RBI single by Marlon Byrd in the sixth.

By then the Cardinals had things well in hand as baseball’s tightest division race once again drew even.

”My velocity was a lot better than in my last start, my sinker was really working and I was able to pitch to both sides of the plate,” Kelly said.

The Pirates, whose 79 wins are tied for the franchise’s high-water mark since 1992, made two bold moves last week in hopes of drawing ahead. They brought in Byrd and catcher John Buck from the New York Mets on Tuesday, then made an even bigger splash Saturday when they convinced Morneau to leave Minnesota after 11 seasons.

Morneau arrived at PNC Park midway through Saturday night’s blowout and watched the remainder of the game from the dugout. He got a better view on Sunday, playing first base and batting sixth.

The 2006 AL MVP grounded out in his first plate appearance, walked in his second and then lined a single to right field his third time up. He ended his first game for Pittsburgh with a deep fly to the warning track in the ninth.

— Associated Press —

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