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Kansas City signs first-round pick Hunter Dozier

Hunter DozierThe Kansas City Royals announced Monday the club has signed first-round draft choice Hunter Dozier, the eighth overall pick in the 2013 First-Year Player Draft.

The 21-year old Dozier, a 6-foot-4, 220-pound shortstop from Stephen F. Austin University, batted .396 with 17 home runs and 52 RBI this season. He led the Southland Conference in batting average, slugging percentage (.755), doubles (25) and home runs, earning Louisville Slugger First Team All-America honors.
He was a two-time All-Southland Conference selection, becoming the first shortstop in school history to earn that distinction, and was an All-South Central Region selection last year, when he hit .357 with 22 doubles, 10 homers and 37 RBI.

— Royals Media Relations —

Kansas City completes three-game sweep of Astros with 2-0 win

RoyalsLuis Mendoza finally figured out what he needs to do to succeed at home.

Mendoza pitched four-hit ball in matching zeros with Lucas Harrell for seven innings Sunday before Alex Gordon and Eric Hosmer each had run-scoring singles off reliever Hector Ambriz in the eighth to lead the Kansas City Royals to a 2-0 win over the Houston Astros for their fifth straight win.

Mendoza was winless with an 8.05 ERA in his first four home starts this season but was at ease on the mound Sunday.

”Mendy threw a tremendous game,” Hosmer said. ”He really had his sinker working and was pounding strikes and playing great defense behind him. Moose (Mike Moustakas) made a lot of great plays behind him.”

The Royals’ bullpen has not allowed a run in 17 2-3 innings in the past six games. Royals manager Ned Yost had no doubt Kansas City had the upper hand if the outcome would be determined by the relievers.

”Mendy was throwing great and still was at 90 pitches, but was fixing to come around for the fourth time to the top of that order,” Yost said. ”And I’m sitting there thinking I’ve got (Aaron) Crow, (Greg) Holland, (Kelvin) Herrera, (Tim) Collins, Hoch (Luke Hochevar) and (J.C.) Gutierrez, who threw two easy innings last night, plus Bruce Chen. I’m fully stocked. It doesn’t matter how long this game goes, I’ve got enough pitching to wait it out.”

Crow (2-1) worked a scoreless eighth to earn a victory that gave the Royals their longest winning streak since taking seven in a row form Sept. 10-17, 2011.

With one out in the eighth, Chris Getz singled and stole second off reliever Amrbiz (1-3). Gordon, who was 1 for 18 on this homestand, singled to center for the first run. Gordon moved to third on center fielder Trevor Crowe’s errant throw home and scored on Hosmer’s single.

Greg Holland pitched a spotless ninth for his 12th save in 14 opportunities.

Harrell, who has won only once since April 29, was held the Royals to two singles in seven scoreless innings.

”He was outstanding,” Astros manager Bo Porter said. ”Even early on when he walked a couple of guys he made good pitches to get out of innings. He did a tremendous job going seven innings against a pretty good-hitting lineup.”

The Astros got only one runner past first base in the first six innings. Ronny Cedeno doubled to start the third and advanced to third base on a groundout, but was stranded there.

Mendoza, who entered 0-2 with an 8.05 ERA in four home starts, retired 12 in a row after Cedeno’s double.

Harrell, who had won only one of his previous seven starts, retired 13 in a row from the second inning until Perez’s single in the sixth. But he was quickly erased when Billy Butler grounded into a double play.

Perez also singled in the first, when the Royals loaded the bases with two outs on walks to Butler and Mike Moustakas walked in the first to load the bases with two outs. Harrell got out of the jam by retiring David Lough with a fielder’s choice grounder.

Harrell allowed just one runner – Jeff Francoeur, who walked to leadoff the second – after the first inning. Harrell threw 51 pitches – only 26 strikes – in the first two innings, but needed just 48 pitches for the next five innings.

”I was more aggressive,” Harrell said after the first two innings. ”I started pounding the zone and using my sinker more to get ahead. And then I threw some really good curveballs.”

The Astros opened the seventh with singles from Carlos Pena and J.D. Martinez, but failed to score.

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western’s Schulze, Fink selected on day three of MLB Draft

MWSUMWSUUnanimous Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association player of the year Michael Schulze added to his list of accolades on Saturday afternoon when he was selected by the St. Louis Cardinals in the Major League Baseball Draft.

The Cardinals used their 19th round selection, number 575 overall, to draft Schulze. He was the seventh infielder and sixth shortstop selected by the Cardinals in the 2013 Draft.

The selection comes following a standout junior season for Schulze, the anchor of the MWSU lineup. Schulze earned national player of the year honors from Daktronics and the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA).

He was also named to the first team All-American squads by Daktronics, ABCA and the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA) All-America teams. He set a single season school record for batting average (.439), hits (94) and runs scored (70).

Schulze was also the region player of the year and first team All-Region by Daktronics, ABCA and the NCBWA.

He was finally the MIAA Player of the Year and a first team selection. He had 17 doubles, two triples, five home runs and 49 RBI from his lead off position. He stole 17 base’s and had a .939 fielding percentage with 69 putouts and 146 assists.

Unanimous Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association first team All-MIAA third baseman Grand Fink added to his list of accolades on Saturday afternoon when he was selected by the Cleveland Indians in the Major League Baseball Draft.

The Indians used their 23rd round selection, number 681 overall, to draft Fink. He was the fourth infielder and first third baseman selected by the Indians in the 2013 Draft.

The selection comes following a standout senior season for Fink. Fink earned numerous All-American honors which included first team by Daktronics.

He was a second team selection by the American Baseball Coaches Association and the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association. He was one of the eight finalists who were selected for the Tino Martinez Award which is presented to the most outstanding player in the DII College Baseball.

Fink tied the MWSU single season record for most home runs in a season with 14 while hitting .397 on the year. He had 77 hits, 40 runs scored, 14 doubles, two triples and 51 RBI. He led the Griffons with a .706 slugging percentage and played excellent in the field with a .959 fielding percentage. He finished with 95 assists, 44 putouts and only six errors.

Schulze and Fink helped the Griffons to the most wins in school history at 40-12 and to their second ever NCAA Division II Playoff appearance.

Schulze and Fink are the first Griffon baseball players to be drafted since pitcher AJ Huttenlocker was a 44th round selection of the Oakland Athletics in 2009.  In total, Schulze and Fink become the 5th & 6th players from MWSU to be drafted.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Royals take down Houston for fourth straight victory

RoyalsErvin Santana plans to give the ball from his 100th career win to his mother.

It’s a gift that’s been a long time coming.

Santana pitched seven snappy innings in his seventh attempt to reach the milestone, and the Royals finally gave him enough support in a 7-2 victory over the Houston Astros on Saturday night that also gave Kansas City its fourth consecutive win.

”It’s a dream come true. I’m just very excited for it,” Santana said of the win. ”It’s a long process, a lot of bad outings and a lot of good outings. It feels good to get there.”

Santana (4-5) entered the game with the worst run support among qualifying pitchers in the American League, a big reason why he already had six fruitless tries to win his 100th game.

He finally made thanks to a seemingly endless series of singles and doubles off the Astros’ Erik Bedard (1-3), who failed to make it through the fifth inning.

”Santana pitched good. He was throwing strikes, getting people off balance and getting outs,” Bedard said. ”On the contrary, when I pitched they got hits and scored runs.”

Santana allowed five hits in seven innings, striking out six without a walk. The only damage he allowed came on an RBI single by Jose Altuve and a solo homer by Chris Carter.

”He was commanding his fastball extremely well, good slider he kept down and on the outside of the plate. Good speed on his breaking ball. But command more than anything else,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”He just looked dominant at times.”

Kansas City had been averaging 2.68 runs per nine innings in games Santana started, and it hadn’t scored more than four runs for him before Saturday night.

But the offense has been coming alive in the nine games since Hall of Famer George Brett took over as interim hitting coach. The Royals have put up at least four runs in each of their four wins, and that’s no negligible feat: They improved to 20-5 when scoring at least four times.

The result of the Royals’ recently improved production has been just their third four-game winning streak of the year and their first since April 30-May 5.

It didn’t take long for them to strike Saturday night, either.

David Lough led off the game with a single and motored into second when centerfielder Brandon Barnes bobbled the ball. Lough scored on a base hit by Salvador Perez, and he in turn came around on a double by Hosmer that was helped into the left-field corner by some gusting wind.

The Royals added three more in the fourth when Bedard put the first five batters on base. The runs came on an RBI single by Miguel Tejada, a runs-scoring double by Jeff Francoeur and a bases-loaded, double-play groundout by Lough that made it 5-0.

Kansas City tacked on another in the fifth when Hosmer worked a two-out walk and Lorenzo Cain hit a two-out pitch into the gap in right, knocking Bedard from the game.

It was a forgettable 200th career start for the left-hander, who gave up six runs in 4 2-3 innings. It certainly bore little resemblance to his last time out, when Bedard allowed just one run over seven innings in a win over the Angels.

”I think Erik, even though he battled, there were some plays that probably should have been made that were not made,” Astros manager Bo Porter said. ”Make no excuse about it, he battled.”

Santana had no such trouble against the light-hitting Astros, who only had one hit over the first five innings and didn’t push a run across until there were two out in the sixth.

Carter’s homer came in the seventh inning.

Otherwise, Santana was in control all night. He struck out at least one in each of the first five innings, and picked up his first victory since beating Cleveland on April 27.

”Most of us just found out tonight. A hundred wins, that’s unbelievable, man,” Hosmer said. ”This is a tough league. If you get to 100 wins, that means you’ve had a long career.”

— Associated Press —

St. Louis drops 4-2 game Saturday at Cincinnati

CardsThree Mat Latos starts against St. Louis. Three Cincinnati Reds wins – their only wins against the Cardinals this season.

That’s the record after Latos turned in seven solid innings and the Reds broke out of their slump with a 4-2 win over St. Louis on Saturday night.

”It felt real good,” said Latos, who didn’t get the decision in the Reds’ first win over St. Louis this season. ”Against that lineup, any time you can hold them to two runs or less and not walk anybody is a good day. That’s a great lineup – not tough. Great.”

Devin Mesoraco homered and drove in two runs, and Jay Bruce also homered and turned in one of several eye-catching defensive plays as the Reds snapped a three-game losing streak and scored more than two runs against St. Louis for the first time in the last seven games between the teams.

Latos (6-0), who got the decision in Cincinnati’s last win over St. Louis on April 29, allowed eight hits and two runs with no walks and five strikeouts against a Cardinals team that went into the game leading the National League in hitting. He gave the Reds exactly what they needed.

”That was a very, very, very good ballgame,” manager Dusty Baker said.

St. Louis right fielder Carlos Beltran credited Latos with making adjustments.

”Every time we face Latos, he seems different,” Beltran said, who struck out to end the seventh as the last Cardinals batter to face Latos. ”He mixes it up pretty good. He kept me off balance. When a pitcher can do that most of the time, he is going to be successful.”

Latos got help from several stellar defensive plays, including back-to-back grabs by center fielder Shin-Soo Choo and Bruce of deep drives against the wall in the sixth, and first baseman Joey Votto’s behind-the-back flip to Latos, who caught it barehanded and tagged first base to eliminate Matt Carpenter in the seventh. Latos rated that play and Bruce’s leaping catch of David Freese’s drive to the right field wall in the sixth as even.

”They were both outstanding,” he said. ”I saw Joey out of the corner of my eye. That’s why I barehanded it. I wasn’t sure if Jay was going to catch that ball.”

The Reds, who’d lost five of their last six games against St. Louis, scored four against St. Louis rookie left-hander Tyler Lyons (2-2). He gave up six hits and a walk with two strikeouts in 5 1-3 innings before a sellout crowd of 40,740 at Great American Ball Park.

Jonathan Broxton pitched a scoreless eighth and Aroldis Chapman allowed one hit and hit a batter in the ninth while earning his 16th save.

The score was 2-2 when Derrick Robinson, a rookie outfielder making his first career start in the No. 2 slot in the batting order, led off the sixth with a double down the right-field line. Votto followed with a ringing double to straightaway center field. Robinson scored the go-ahead run, and Votto went to third on shortstop Pete Kozma’s errant throw to the plate.

Votto couldn’t score on Brandon Phillips’ groundout to a drawn-in Kozma or on Bruce’s swinging bunt infield single. Todd Frazier walked to load the bases, and Mesoraco grounded a single through the hole into left field for a 4-2 lead.

The Cardinals used fundamentals to take a 1-0 lead in the second. Yadier Molina lined Latos’ first pitch to right for a double, went to third base on David Freese’s fly out to deep right and scored on Jon Jay’s broken-bat groundout to second.

Bruce tied it in the bottom of the inning with his 10th homer of the season, a 382-foot solo shot into the right-field bullpen on a 1-0 pitch with one out.

Beltran and Allen Craig both extended hitting streaks while giving St. Louis a 2-1 lead in the third.
Beltran extended his to nine games with a one-out double to left-center field and moved to third on Matt Holliday’s groundout to second. Craig hit a slow bouncer up the middle that shortstop Zack Cozart fielded behind second base, but his hurried throw took Votto off the bag, allowing Beltran to score. Craig was credited with an infield hit that gave him a 12-game hitting streak.

Mesoraco tied it 2-2 in the fifth with his third homer of the season and first since May 21, a 382-foot drive into the right-center field seats on a 1-0 pitch from Lyons.

— Associated Press —

Butler’s eighth inning RBI double helps KC win third straight

RoyalsBilly Butler drove in Eric Hosmer with the go-ahead run in the eighth inning, and the Kansas City Royals beat the Houston Astros 4-2 on Friday night for their third straight win.

Kelvin Herrera (3-4) worked a perfect eighth inning in relief of James Shields, and Greg Holland pitched the ninth for his 11th save and second during the Royals’ modest winning streak.

Shields engaged in quite the pitchers’ duel with the Astros’ Jordan Lyles, but the game came down to the bullpens. Houston brought in Wesley Wright (0-2) in the eighth and Hosmer greeted him with a single, and then Butler doubled off Josh Fields for the go-ahead run.

David Lough’s RBI double moments later created a cushion for the Royals, who also got a two-run homer from Salvador Perez earlier in the game to help them win three straight for the first time since May 1-5 – a stretch interrupted twice by weather postponements.

Trevor Crowe and Jason Castro drove in the only runs for Houston, which had won six straight on the road, its best run since July 18-22, 2005.

Shields allowed the leadoff hitter to reach base in each of the first four innings, and again in the seventh, but for the most part the Royals’ ace kept limiting the damage.

He left Brandon Barnes standing on third base in the first inning, and induced double-play grounders off the bat of Marwin Gonzalez to end the second and fourth. Shields finally allowed a run when Crowe followed up another leadoff single by Barnes with a triple in the third.

Even then, Shields escaped more trouble by striking out the next three batters.

Lyles matched the former All-Star pitch for pitch, the young right-hander cruising through the first inning before setting the Royals down in order in the second and third.

Kansas City finally got to him in the fourth when Hosmer ricocheted a single off Lyles and Perez sent a pitch sailing over the bullpen in left field for a two-run homer.

Lyles buckled down, though, and the Astros eventually pulled even.

It happened in the seventh after Gonzalez led off with a single. Shields retired the next two batters before Castro’s double to right field knotted the game 2-all.

That left both starting pitchers to watch things play out from the dugout.

Shields allowed nine hits and three walks in seven innings but failed to win for the seventh straight start. He hasn’t picked up a win since April 30 against Tampa Bay, even though he’s only allowed more than two earned runs once over that span.

Lyles, coming off consecutive wins for the first time in his career, gave up six hits and a walk in his seven innings. He’s allowed two earned runs or fewer in five straight outings.

— Associated Press —

Wainwright wins ninth game as Cardinals pound Cincinnati

CardsAdam Wainwright pitched seven innings for his ninth win, and every Cardinals starter had a hit in a 9-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds on Friday night that gave St. Louis a four-game lead in the NL Central, its biggest of the season.

Wainwright (9-3) gave up two runs and seven hits as the Cardinals improved the major leagues’ best record to 40-21.

Slumping Pete Kozma drove in three runs, David Freese and Jon Jay knocked in two apiece, and four Cardinals extended long hitting streaks against a pitching staff in a downturn. Mike Leake (5-3) lasted only five innings for the Reds, who have given up 26 runs while losing their last three games.

St. Louis has won the last four series between the teams.

— Associated Press —

Royals rally past Minnesota to take series finale

RoyalsIt started with a double by Alex Gordon, gained momentum on a single by Eric Hosmer and another double by Billy Butler, and then was capped off by a two-run shot from Lorenzo Cain.

It was a four-run eighth inning by the Kansas City Royals.

It was the kind of outburst that hasn’t happened often.

In this case, it carried the Royals to a 7-3 victory over the Minnesota Twins on Thursday night and to back-to-back wins for the first time since May 4-5. But the big inning also represented as many runs as the scuffling Kansas City offense had produced in any of its last 14 games.

”We’re getting better. We’re starting to come out of it,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”The offense looks like it’s starting to turn the corner a little bit.”

The Royals began the season 17-10 before winning six of their next 28 games, their collapse lowlighted by a franchise-record 11-game home skid that ended Wednesday night.

Now they’re on a winning streak, modest though it may be.

”We’ve always felt confidence. We had a bad May. That’s all I can say,” Butler said. ”We had a bad May, but our confidence has never been wavering. You saw it tonight. We got down 3-0 and battled back and kind of exploded there in the eighth.”

The Royals hadn’t scored seven runs in a game since beating the Astros on May 21.

Wade Davis allowed three unearned runs before the Royals bullpen took control. Luke Hochevar, Tim Collins (2-1) and Greg Holland combined for four scoreless innings to wrap up the win.

”You can see a little more chemistry and contagious hitting-type things like tonight, and a little bit yesterday, chipping away and chipping away,” Davis said. ”We’re not going to wake up and be the best in baseball, but we just have to keep chipping away.”

All of the Royals’ runs in the eighth came off Jared Burton (0-3), who allowed Hosmer’s go-ahead single and an RBI double by Butler before serving up Cain’s homer to left field.

”It’s not magic, guys. You either execute or you get executed. This one hurts,” Burton said. ”We got off to an early lead. It’s a tough one to lose. We needed this series.”

Instead, the Royals won their first since taking two of three from the Angels in mid-May.

”At the end we kind of let it get away,” Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said.

Things began well enough for Minnesota when Jamey Carroll led off the game with a grounder that third baseman Mike Moustakas fielded cleanly and then threw over Hosmer’s head at first base for an error. Carroll ended up on second, and eventually reached third on a groundout.

The errors were only beginning for Kansas City.

Josh Willingham proceeded to strike out on a wild pitch that not only allowed him to reach base but also allowed Carroll to score. Two batters later, Ryan Doumit went deep for the second time in the series to give the Twins a 3-0 lead – all on one hit.

”That first inning had some weird stuff happen,” Davis said. ”I just kept telling myself, ‘Keep it right there,’ especially when we scored the two runs. It gave me extra motivation to bear down.”

The two runs came in the second on a single by Chris Getz, and the Royals finally tied the game in the sixth when Hosmer doubled and Salvador Perez drove him home with a single.

That kept both starting pitchers from factoring in the decision.

The Twins’ Mike Pelfrey, whom the Royals tagged for six runs in two innings in April, went a season-best 6 1-3 on Thursday night. He allowed three runs on seven hits and a walk.

Davis needed 107 pitches to get through five innings for Kansas City, thanks in part to his shaky defense. He allowed four hits and three walks, but all three runs off him were unearned.

It was the first time he hadn’t allowed an earned run in a start since April 17.

”That’s kind of the way it’s been for Wade. He finds ways to bend a little bit but never breaks, or seldom breaks, but always gets his pitch count up high,” Yost said. ”He gets himself into trouble and pitches himself out of it, and he did that again tonight.”

— Associated Press —

Miller leads St. Louis past Arizona to split four-game series

CardsShelby Miller gave himself a boost with his bat.

The rookie pitcher hit his first career home run and pitched six sharp innings, leading the St. Louis Cardinals over the Arizona Diamondbacks 12-8 Thursday night.

”I haven’t hit a home run since high school, at least in a game,” said Miller, whose 1.91 earned run average continues to lead the National League. ”It was neat. It will be something I remember for sure. Sometimes you get lucky.”

Miller (7-3) allowed two runs and six hits. He struck out nine and walked none.

Arizona scored three times in the ninth, and Edward Mujica got the last two outs for his 18th save in 18 chances.

Matt Adams and Daniel Descalso homered in an eight-run fourth inning off Ian Kennedy. Matt Holliday and Matt Carpenter also connected for the Cardinals.

Kennedy (3-4) was tagged for 10 runs and 13 hits in four innings.

Kennedy nearly escaped the fourth with giving up just one run, but his throw off on Yadier Molina’s comebacker pulled shortstop Didi Gregorius wide of second base. What could have been an inning-ending double play instead led to Adams’ three-run homer and Descalso’s two-run shot.

”I think we’ve made that play and we expect to make that play,” Arizona manager Kirk Gibson said. ”It didn’t happen today and it cost us.”

Kennedy endured the entire inning and threw 50 pitches. He had 99 total, only 60 for strikes.

He said typically he’ll ask his middle infielders which one will cover the bag in a situation like that before he makes a pitch. He failed to do so and when he saw second baseman Cliff Pennington break toward the bag his instinct was to throw it to him until Gregorius took charge.

By then, Kennedy double clutched and threw wide.

”That whole sequence. It was perfect,” he said. ”I was trying to get a double play in that situation. It would have been a lot different if I was able to turn. That’s just my fault. I should have known who covered the bag just before that pitch.”

The Cardinals hit five homers in a game for the first time since last July 27. The previous time they did it at home was June 24, 2005, at the former Busch Stadium.

David Freese extended his career-best hitting streak to 16 games for St. Louis. Descalso scored twice in the big fourth and finished with three hits, including a double.

The first five batters in the St. Louis starting lineup all got two hits, as did Miller.

Manager Mike Matheny liked what he saw from Miller at the plate. He hopes that the pitcher doesn’t let it change his approach.

””You’ll take any runs you can get, but we hope he doesn’t go up there trying to do that every time,” Matheny said.

The Cardinals greeted reliever Matt Reynolds with back-to-back home runs from Miller and Carpenter to open the fifth and stretch their lead to 12-2.

Arizona scored twice in the first on an RBI groundout by Paul Goldschmidt and a single by Miguel Montero.

”I have a tendency of letting up in the first inning,” Miller said. ”I have got to figure out a way to be as aggressive like I am in the middle of the game and toward the end, in the first couple of innings. I just wasn’t doing it early on.”

Gerardo Parra had three hits, including an RBI single in a three-run seventh for Arizona. The Diamondbacks scored three more in the ninth when rookie Keith Butler gave up a hit to Pennington and a double to Wil Nieves before walking three consecutive batters.

— Associated Press —

Royals make three selections on first day of MLB Draft

riggertRoyalsThe Kansas City Royals completed the first day of the 2013 First-Year Rule 4 Player Draft today, selecting three players today, highlighted by the eighth overall selection, shortstop Hunter Dozier.  The Royals also selected left-handed pitcher Sean Manaea from Indiana State with the #34 overall pick and left-handed pitcher Cody Reed from Northwest Mississippi Community College at #46.

The Royals selected the 21-year-old Dozier, a 6-foot-4, 220-pound shortstop from the Stephen F. Austin University with the eighth overall pick on Thursday. Dozier batted .396 with 17 home runs and 52 RBI this season. He led the Southland Conference in batting average, slugging percentage (.755), doubles (25) and home runs, earning Louisville Slugger First Team All-America honors. He was a two-time All-Southland Conference selection, becoming the first shortstop in school history to earn that distinction, and was an All-South Central Region selection in 2012, when he hit .357 with 22 doubles, 10 homers and 37 RBI. A native of Denton, Texas, Dozier was a multi-sport star at Denton High School. He was the shortstop and ace right-handed pitcher on the baseball team and also quarterbacked the football squad. He was a 2008 all-area selection and the district Newcomer of the Year. After suffering a football injury as a junior, he came back to hit .400 during his senior season and earn all-district honors.

Kansas City picked the 21-year-old Manaea, a 6-foot-5, 215-pound left-handed pitcher from Indiana State with the #34 overall selection. Manaea was the second-ranked left-handed pitcher in the draft according to Baseball America. He was 5-4 with a 1.47 ERA in 13 starts for the Sycamores this season. The 6-foot-5 lefty fanned 93 in 73.1 innings pitched, ranking third in the NCAA in strikeouts per 9 innings at 11.4. He was named Second Team All-Missouri Valley this season and to the preseason Golden Spikes Award watch list. He burst onto the national scene last summer in the Cape Cod League. He earned both the B.F.C. Whitehouse Top Pitcher and the Robert A. McNeese Outstanding Pro Prospect awards from the CCBL, totaling a 5-1 record and a 1.22 ERA with a league-leading 85 strikeouts in 57.1 innings pitched.

The Royals drafted 20-year-old Reed, a 6-foot-5, 220-pound left-handed pitcher from Northwest Mississippi Community College with the #46 overall pick. He completed his eligibility at Northwest Mississippi CC this year, going 8-3 with a 2.39 ERA and 96 strikeouts in 73.1 innings pitched. Reed was ninth in the NJCAA in strikeouts, while his 5 complete games were tied for 14th. He was a NJCAA Division II third team All-America selection and was named Mississippi Association of Community & Junior Colleges (MACJC) Pitcher of the Week twice this year.

— Royals Media Relations —

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