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Santana, Royals blank Detroit in series opener

RoyalsErvin Santana allowed two singles in 7 1-3 innings and the Kansas City Royals beat the Detroit Tigers 1-0 on Friday night to snap a five-game losing streak.

Santana, who can be a free agent after the season and has been widely speculated to be traded before the July 31 deadline without a player clearing waivers, did not allow a runner to reach second base. He walked one and struck out six.

Santana (6-6), who was coming off his worst outing of the season, when he allowed eight runs on 10 hits in a July 11 loss at Cleveland, retired the first 10 Tigers before Torii Hunter’s one-out single in the fourth.

Kelvin Herrera, who was just recalled from Triple-A Omaha, replaced Santana in the eighth after he walked Jhonny Peralta with one out. Herrera retired Andy Dirks on a grounder and struck out Alex Avila looking.

Greg Holland worked a flawless ninth for his 23rd save in 25 opportunities, striking out one.

Alex Gordon led off the Royals’ first with a single to right, stole second with one out and scored on Billy Butler’s ground-ball single to center.

That was the only run Tigers right-hander Anibal Sanchez (7-7) would allow in six innings, but that was one too many.

Sanchez, who was making his third start since coming off the disabled list with a shoulder strain, left after 101 pitches, allowing four singles, walking five and striking out three.

The Royals loaded the bases with two outs in the sixth on Butler’s single and walks to Mike Moustakas and David Lough, but failed to score as Alcides Escobar struck out to end the inning.

The Royals are 4-2 against the American League Central Division-leading Tigers, with five of the games decided by two or less runs.

The Tigers were shut out for the seventh time this season.

— Associated Press —

Westbrook’s pitching and hitting lead St. Louis past San Diego

CardsJake Westbrook pitched 6 1-3 innings of two-run ball and contributed three hits, All-Star Matt Carpenter continued his strong season with three hits and three RBIs, and the St. Louis Cardinals beat the San Diego Padres 9-6 on Friday night.

A career .116 hitter, Westbrook had never had more than one hit in a game. The right-hander, who scored twice and had an RBI, surpassed his hit output for the year with two singles and a double in his three at-bats. That raised his batting from .100 to .217.

On the mound, Westbrook (6-4) scattered eight hits while striking out one and walking four.

After rookie Carlos Martinez allowed three runs in the ninth to make it a three-run game, All-Star Edward Mujica got the last two outs to record his 27th save in 29 chances.

Fellow All-Stars Carlos Beltran and Yadier Molina each drove in two runs for the Cardinals, with Beltran contributing two sacrifice flies and Molina a two-run double in the seventh.

St. Louis reached a season-best 22 games over .500 (58-36) and owns the best winning percentage in the majors (.617).

The Padres’ lone All-Star representative, Everth Cabrera, drove in two runs with a two-run single off Westbrook in the seventh. San Diego, which lost 18 of 22 to conclude the first half, fell to 15-32 on the road and 74-149 in St. Louis (6-19 at new Busch Stadium).

Former Cardinal Jason Marquis (9-5) lost his third straight. Marquis, who has not won since beating Arizona 6-4 on June 15, was touched for six runs on eight hits and three walks.

Marquis blanked the Cardinals the first two innings before Westbrook led off the third with a single to center. He later scored on Beltran’s sacrifice fly to center.

Two innings later, Westbrook started another rally when he doubled over right fielder Will Venable’s head to begin the fifth. Carpenter followed with an RBI double to the gap in left center and he scored on Beltran’s sacrifice fly one out later that made it 3-0.

The Cardinals broke it open and chased Marquis by scoring three times in the sixth. With the bases loaded and one out, Westbrook coaxed a single through the middle to drive in Matt Adams. Carpenter then drove home two more with an RBI single to center.

— Associated Press —

Royals make roster moves Thursday

riggertRoyalsThe Kansas City Royals announced Thursday that infielder Chris Getz and relief pitcher Kelvin Herrera have been placed on the taxi squad in anticipation of being recalled on Friday. In a corresponding move, the Royals have optioned infielder Johnny Giavotella and relief pitcher Everett Teaford to Triple-A Omaha.

The club also announced that infielder Pedro Ciriaco, who KC claimed off waivers on Tuesday, has been assigned to Omaha.

Getz, 29, opened the year as the Royals’ starting second baseman, but was optioned to Omaha on June 22. The sixth-year infielder is batting .214 in 47 games for KC this season with five doubles, one homer and four stolen bases. Getz hit .313 in 14 games with the Storm Chasers during his minor league stint, collecting five doubles and a triple in 64 at bats. He’s in his fourth season with the Royals and is a .252 career hitter, including a career-best .275 average in 2012.

Herrera, 23, is in his third stint with Kansas City this season. He was optioned to Omaha most recently on June 25. The right-handed reliever is 3-5 with a 5.20 ERA in 29 appearances with the Royals this season. Herrera has made 12 relief appearances between Omaha and Northwest Arkansas, allowing two earned runs in 18.0 innings for a 1.00 ERA. He’s recorded a combined 27 strikeouts and just six walks for the Storm Chasers and Naturals. Herrera is 7-9 with a 3.24 ERA in 107 appearances at the Major League level.

— Royals Media Relations —

Royals claim SS Pedro Ciriaco off waivers from San Diego

RoyalsThe Kansas City Royals announced Tuesday they have claimed shortstop Pedro Ciriaco off outright waivers from the San Diego Padres.

Ciriaco, 27, is batting .228 with eight stolen bases, three doubles, two triples and two homers in 51 games this season split between San Diego and Boston.  He started this season with the Red Sox, but was traded to San Diego on June 10 for a player to be named later.

Ciricao has played all four infield positions this season, seeing a combined 26 games at shortstop and 10 at third base.  The fourth-year infielder hit .293 with Boston last season, setting career highs in nearly every offensive statistical category, including 15 doubles, 19 RBI and 33 runs scored in 76 games.  He is a career .279 hitter.

— Royals Media Relations —

Petition Drive Started To Get Frank White Into National Baseball Hall Of Fame

frank white “Second to None,” a grassroots committee in the Kansas City area, has been formed to endorse Frank White for the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

The group is hoping that White will be strongly considered.  He was a 5-time All-Star, 8-time Gold Glove Award winner, World Series Champion, Royals Hall of Famer, one of only three Royals’ players whose number is retired and his bronze statue is prominently displayed at Kauffman Stadium, .

 

“Our community is certainly excited that Frank may be considered for the next ballot as evidenced by the already 6,500 signed petitions (growing daily) and the myriad of very impressive letters of endorsement already received,” said Lenny Cohen, a committee member from Olathe, KS.

Fans can go to a newly formed Web site  to learn about White’s career and sign the petition that will be submitted over the next month to the Baseball Writers, responsible for developing the ballot.

Royals lose fifth straight as they get swept by Cleveland

RoyalsA week ago, the Indians were reeling amid serious questions about whether they could contend.

Five wins have put them back on track.

And back on Detroit’s heels.

Asdrubal Cabrera hit a two-run double to cap Cleveland’s comeback in the sixth inning, and the Indians charged into the All-Star break with a 6-4 win over Kansas City on Sunday and three-game sweep of the Royals.

Cabrera’s double off Tim Collins (2-5) led the roller-coasting Indians to their fourth straight win. At 51-44, they stayed 1 1-2 games behind the first-place Tigers in the AL Central. Last week, Detroit took three of four from Cleveland to widen its lead in the division. It seemed the Tigers were poised to run away and hide.

But with their fans fearing a collapse like last year, the Indians pulled together.

”We got the city of Cleveland to step back off the ledge after the Detroit series,” said All-Star second baseman Jason Kipnis. ”So that’s good. We wanted to push ourselves. To be able to sweep them and get a couple days off now, that’s a great way to end it.”

Cleveland has its most wins at the All-Star break since 2007 – the last time the Indians made the playoffs.

Reliever Rich Hill (1-1) got two outs in the sixth, and closer Chris Perez – Cleveland’s fifth reliever – worked the ninth for his 13th save as the Indians improved to 43-1 when leading after eight.

Billy Butler had three hits for the Royals (43-49), who dropped their fifth straight. Kansas City is third in the AL Central, eight games back.

”We’ve had a rough five games,” manager Ned Yost said. ”They can go take a break, regroup and hopefully come back and play more consistent baseball.”

The Indians have had their issues with inconsistency, as well, but they have been resilient all season. The series finale was no different as Cleveland trailed 4-3 in the sixth before rallying against Kansas City’s usually reliable bullpen.

Collins, who took the loss in Friday’s series opener, walked Lonnie Chisenhall leading off. Drew Stubbs singled, Michael Bourn sacrificed, and Cabrera, whose name has surfaced in trade rumors, drove a 1-0 pitch into the gap in right-center to put Cleveland back in front.

Kipnis followed with an RBI single off Everett Teaford to give the Indians a 6-4 lead.

”I was real proud of our guys,” manager Terry Francona said. ”We kept battling, and because of it we go into the break with a nice win.”

Bryan Shaw and Joe Smith combined for two scoreless innings before Perez, who spent time on the disabled list and was charged with drug possession in the first half, gave up a one-out double in the ninth but struck out Butler and retired All-Star catcher Salvador Perez on a grounder for the final out.

The Indians have overcome their share of injuries, inconsistent pitching and a 4-16 stretch which put them 5 1-2 games back of the Tigers on June 17.

After dropping three of four to Detroit, Cleveland finished the first half by going 5-1.

”It’s been a great first half for us,” Indians first baseman Nick Swisher said. ”We’ve dealt with a lot of injuries and to be standing where we are right now, we’ve got to feel great about that.”

Royals starter James Shields ended up with his seventh no-decision in his last nine starts. The right-hander allowed three runs and seven hits in five innings, leaving with a 4-3 lead. Shields has received sparse run support as the Royals have scored just nine total runs in his six losses.

Shields, though, was more focused on getting his team turned around than his record.

”You never want to lose five in a row, but I’m not too worried about it,” Shields said. ”We’ve done a good job of grinding this first half. It definitely could be a lot worse and it definitely could be a lot better. Right now we need to kick it in gear and string together some wins.”

Indians starter Ubaldo Jimenez didn’t get through the fifth inning, his shortest start since June 7.

After the Indians took a 3-2 lead in the third, Jimenez let the Royals grab it back in the fourth on Johnny Giavotella’s RBI groundout and Alcides Escobar’s run-scoring single.

Jimenez walked the leadoff hitter in the fifth and was quickly pulled by Francona before things got worse. Reliever C.C. Lee made his major league debut and retired the Royals on three straight popups to keep the Indians within one.

Shields worked around a two-on, none-out jam in the second, but hurt himself with a one-out walk in the third when the Indians scored twice to take a 3-2 lead.

Kipnis walked with one down and moved up on a groundout. Michael Brantley, who came in batting .382 with runners in scoring position, hit an RBI single to tie it 2-all. Santana then doubled inside the bag at first, and third-base coach Brad Mills never hesitated in waving Brantley home.

”I don’t feel like I struggled,” Shields said. ”I threw some really good pitches. I think I threw three changeups that probably would have hit the dirt, and they got base hits on them. They probably had about 20 foul-offs. That’s a good team over there. They work really good at-bats.”

— Associated Press —

Molina helps Cardinals win series finale at Chicago

CardsYadier Molina hit a three-run homer in St. Louis’ four-run ninth inning, and the Cardinals beat the Chicago Cubs 10-6 on Sunday night in the majors’ final game before the All-Star break.

Allen Craig lined a tiebreaking RBI single into left field before Molina drove an 0-2 pitch from Kevin Gregg (2-2) over the wall in left for his seventh homer. Craig and Molina tuned up for Tuesday’s game in New York with four hits apiece, helping St. Louis to a season-high 21 hits overall.

Chicago went up 4-3 on Darwin Barney’s three-run homer in the sixth and pinch hitter Cody Ransom had a tying two-run double in the eighth, but the Cubs’ bullpen was unable to hold off the NL’s highest-scoring team.

Pete Kozma had two RBI singles as the Cardinals won for the seventh time in nine games to salvage a split of the four-game series. Edward Mujica (2-1) had his second blown save opportunity in 28 chances, but managed to get the win on the same day he was chosen to replace teammate Adam Wainwright on the NL All-Star team.

Despite injuries to key pitchers Chris Carpenter, Jaime Garcia and Jason Motte, St. Louis heads to the All-Star break with baseball’s best record at 57-36. It leads the NL Central by one game over surprising Pittsburgh, which lost 4-2 to the New York Mets earlier in the day.

Barney also had a run-scoring single for the Cubs, who went 6-4 on a 10-game stretch in Chicago that included a makeup game at the crosstown White Sox last Monday. The four RBIs for Barney matched a career high set in a 14-4 victory against Pittsburgh on July 30, 2012.

After a slow start, the Cubs (42-51) are a respectable 24-21 in their last 45 games. It’s good enough for a four-game improvement compared to last year at this point, when the North Siders were 38-55 on their way to their first 100-loss season since 1966.

The Cardinals carried a 3-1 lead into the sixth, but Wainwright got into trouble after Alfonso Soriano began the inning with a fly ball to the warning track in right. Dioner Navarro and Brian Bogusevic then hit consecutive singles to put runners on first and second.

Wainwright bounced back to strike out Dave Sappelt, but his first pitch to Barney was up and over the plate, and he drove it into the basket in left field for his sixth homer.

That proved to be just a minor little speed bump for the Cardinals, who used four hits to regain the lead during a two-run seventh. Kozma singled in Molina to tie it at 4 and eventually came around on Matt Carpenter’s bouncer into center field.

Adams tacked on an RBI double in eighth, setting the stage for the wild finish.

Travis Wood, who will represent the Cubs at the All-Star festivities, allowed three runs and a season-high 10 hits in 5 2-3 innings. It matched the shortest outing of the year for the consistent lefty, who pitched at least six innings in 17 of his first 18 starts.

Molina was out of the starting lineup for St. Louis’ 6-4 loss on Saturday night and began the night in a 1-for-19 rut covering his previous seven games. But he singled in each of his first two at-bats and forced Bogusevic to make a leaping catch against the wall in center in the eighth.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City’s Holland added to American League All-Star roster

RoyalsMajor League Baseball announced Sunday that Kansas City Royals closer Greg Holland has been named a replacement on the American League All-Star team, taking the spot of Seattle’s Hisashi Iwakuma, who started today for the Mariners and will be unable to pitch on Tuesday night.  Holland will join teammates Alex Gordon and catcher Salvador Perez, who were named to the 84th Midsummer Classic at Citi Field in New York last week.  All three are making their first career trip to the All-Star Game.

This marks the first time since the 1988 All-Star Game in Cincinnati’s Riverfront Stadium that the Royals have had three players selected, when George Brett made his 13th and final All-Star appearance, going as a first baseman, and was joined by infielder Kurt Stillwell and pitcher Mark Gubicza.  This is the 11th time the club has had at least three players named to the American League squad.

Holland, 27, has served as the Royals’ closer since the second half of last season after Jonathan Broxton was dealt to the Reds at the trade deadline.  Greg has made good on 38 of 42 save opportunities since taking over the roll full-time, including a current run of 15 in a row dating back to May 30.  Since that date, Holland has posted a 0.95 ERA, allowing just two earned runs in 19.0 innings, while recording 34 strikeouts and holding opponents to a .111 average (7-for-63).  He has recorded all three outs via the strikeout on six occasions and entered today leading the Majors in strikeouts per batter faced (.444) and strikeouts per 9-inning ratio at 15.43

— Royals Media Relations —

Royals drop second straight game against Indians

RoyalsLonnie Chisenhall hit his first career grand slam, Scott Kazmir pitched into the seventh inning and the Cleveland Indians beat the Kansas City Royals 5-3 on Saturday night.

Chisenhall’s homer in the sixth broke open a 1-0 game and hit off the facing of the second deck in right field, landing in Kansas City’s bullpen.

Kazmir (5-4) allowed two runs in 6 1-3 innings for his first victory since June 21 as the Indians won for the fifth time in seven games.

Miguel Tejada’s RBI single in the seventh broke a streak of 22 consecutive scoreless innings for Kansas City, which has lost four in a row. Alcides Escobar’s infield hit with the bases loaded added two runs in the inning.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis’ rally comes up short against Cubs

CardsMatt Garza pitched into the seventh inning for his fifth consecutive win and Alfonso Soriano homered again, leading the Chicago Cubs to a 6-4 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday night.

Garza allowed a season-high 10 hits in 6 2-3 innings, but held the NL’s highest scoring offense to two runs while improving to 5-0 with a 1.24 ERA in his last six starts. With a handful of scouts from several contenders watching his every move, the right-hander struck out four and walked two.

Garza’s hot stretch has made him one of the top names on the market ahead of the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline. But he also is eligible for free agency after the season, adding a tricky element to the negotiations between any interested team and a Cubs franchise looking for more top-level prospects for its rebuilding project.

Jon Jay had four hits and Matt Adams went 2 for 4 for St. Louis, which had won six of seven, including a 3-2 victory in the second game of the four-game series on Friday night. Lance Lynn was knocked out in the fifth inning in his second-shortest outing of the season.

The Cardinals played without outfielder Matt Holliday, who left Thursday’s night’s 3-0 loss to Chicago due to tightness in his right hamstring. All-Star catcher Yadier Molina was out of the starting lineup on his 31st birthday, but he hit for Rob Johnson in the eighth and stayed in the game.

Molina reached on an error by right fielder Julio Borbon, loading the bases with one out. Matt Carpenter hit a sacrifice fly, trimming the Cubs’ lead to 6-3, but James Russell got Daniel Descalso to fly out to end the inning.

Kevin Gregg allowed Jay’s two-out RBI single in the ninth before retiring Pete Kozma with runners on the corners for his 17th save in 19 chances.

Tony Cruz started for St. Louis at catcher and singled in Adams in the second. But he also was called for interference during Chicago’s three-run rally in the bottom half, setting up Starlin Castro’s dribbler up the third base line for an RBI single.

Soriano drove Lynn’s first pitch of the third over the wall in center field for his 16th homer, extending the lead to 4-1. The slugger went 2 for 5 and is batting .350 (21 for 60) with nine homers and 19 RBIs in his last 15 games, increasing the likelihood that he could be dealt in the next couple weeks.

Garza (6-1) escaped a jam in the fourth and was in control until the Cardinals chased him with three hits in the seventh, including Allen Craig’s run-scoring single.

Garza received a standing ovation from the crowd of 42,240 as he trudged off the mound following Craig’s hit, but the pitcher slammed his glove on his right leg as he made his way to the dugout, upset with the hit by his last batter.

Matt Guerrier came in with two runners on and got Adams to fly out to end the inning.

Lynn (11-4) was charged with six runs, five earned, and a season-high 10 hits in 4 1-3 innings. The right-hander dropped to 5-2 with a 3.30 ERA in eight career appearances against the Cubs.

— Associated Press —

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