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Kansas City signs draft picks Kelce & Johnson

riggertChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Thursday that the club has signed tight end Travis Kelce and linebacker Nico Johnson. Kansas City has now signed seven of eight draft selections from the 2013 NFL Draft.

Kelce (6-5, 260) joined the Chiefs as the team’s first of two third-round picks (63rd overall) in the 2013 NFL Draft. He appeared in 35 games (12 starts) at Cincinnati, recording 54 receptions for 752 yards (13.9 avg.) with nine touchdowns. He also added eight carries for 47 yards (5.9 avg.) with two touchdowns. Kelce was a three-sport standout at Cleveland Heights High School in Cleveland Heights, Ohio.

Johnson (6-2, 249) joined the Chiefs as the club’s fourth-round draft pick (99th overall) in the 2013 NFL Draft. Johnson played in 52 games (21 starts) for the Crimson Tide, posting 163 tackles (87 solo), two QB pressures, four forced fumbles, one fumble recovery, two interceptions and seven passes defensed. He was one of two Alabama players to play on the 2009, 2011 and 201­2 national championship teams. Johnson prepped at Andalusia High School in Andalusia, Ala.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Chiefs sign cornerback Vince Agnew

NFL: Miami Dolphins-Training CampThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Thursday that the club has signed cornerback Vince Agnew.

Agnew (5-10, 196) saw action in four contests with the Dallas Cowboys in 2012. While with Dallas, Agnew spent the majority of his time on the Cowboys practice squad roster.

After originally entering the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Miami Dolphins, Agnew served his initial NFL season on the Dolphins practice squad.

The Grand Rapids, Mich., native played in 47 games at Central Michigan recording 161 tackles (95 solo), five tackles for loss, one interception and 14 passes defensed. He added one forced fumble, one fumble recovery and three blocked kicks on special teams. Agnew prepped at Catholic Central High School in Grand Rapids, Mich.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Kansas City snaps home losing skid with 4-1 win over Twins

RoyalsJeremy Guthrie lasted six shaky innings and the Kansas City bullpen held off the Minnesota Twins the rest of the way Wednesday night, wrapping up a 4-1 victory that ended the Royals’ franchise-record 11-game home losing streak.

It had been exactly one month since Kansas City won a game at Kauffman Stadium, a period marked by offensive ineptitude that had resulted in a precipitous slide into last place in the AL Central.

It also marked the end for hitting coaches Jack Maloof and Andre David, and the return of George Brett to the dugout. The Hall of Fame third baseman was appointed interim hitting coach last week, and while the results still haven’t been great, the Royals may be finally starting to show a spark.

The Twins jumped out to a first-inning lead off Guthrie (6-3), but the right-hander escaped a bases-loaded jam with the help of a nice catch by first baseman Eric Hosmer to prevent any additional damage.

The Royals answered in the bottom half when Hosmer reached second on an error and Salvador Perez drove him in with a single. P.J. Walters (2-1) walked the bases loaded, and David Lough’s two-run, two-out single gave Kansas City enough runs for the rest of the night.

Aaron Crow got the Royals out of a bases-loaded jam in the seventh inning, and Kelvin Herrera worked a perfect eighth. Greg Holland put the first two runners aboard in the ninth before striking out Justin Morneau, Ryan Doumit and Chris Parmelee for his 10th save of the season.

Josh Willingham drove in the only run for the Twins, who left 14 on base.

Billy Butler had three hits, including an RBI single in the seventh, and Mike Moustakas drove a pitch from Walters in the first that would have been a three-run shot had it carried another five feet.

Meanwhile, Guthrie limited the Twins to six hits and three walks to win for the first time since May 9. He also ended a streak of 18 consecutive games by Royals starters without a victory.

Guthrie certainly got some help from his defense.

Hosmer robbed a fan of a foul ball when he made a catch near the Royals’ dugout with the bases loaded to end the first inning. Then in the third, second baseman Chris Getz made a diving play to his left to pilfer Doumit of a base hit that likely would have scored a run.

Walters gave up seven hits and three walks in six innings, but all three runs were unearned.

The Twins right-hander allowed a pair of singles to start the third before Moustakas grounded into a double play to scuttle that inning. He also gave up a single leading off the fourth before Getz grounded into a double play, one that proved timely when Alcides Escobar tripled moments later.

The middle innings were played through a persistent mist that at times turned to rain, giving the sparsely populated bowl of the stadium the look of a car wash. But the grounds crew kept the infield dry, and crew chief Tom Hallion never appeared close to calling for the tarp.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals get blown out by Arizona for second straight loss

CardsPaul Goldschmidt hit his second grand slam in five days, Wade Miley bounced back from his two worst outings of the season and the Arizona Diamondbacks beat the St. Louis Cardinals 10-3 on Wednesday night.

Arizona has won four of five. St. Louis, with the best record in the majors, dropped back-to-back games for the first time since April 28-29.

Goldschmidt became the first Arizona player with two slams on the same road trip. He hit one in a 12-4 win at the Chicago Cubs on Saturday.

Goldschmidt also hit a go-ahead single in the 14th inning to beat St. Louis on Tuesday night. He has a team-leading 14 homers and leads the NL with 53 RBIs, including 12 in his last five games.

Miley (4-5) gave up three runs on 11 hits over 6 2-3 innings. He had given up seven earned runs in each of his previous two starts, but rallied to strike out three and walk one.

Martin Prado had two doubles and scored twice for the Diamondbacks.

Joe Kelly (0-3), making his first start of the season, gave up one earned run in 5 2-3 innings. He made 16 successive appearances of out of the bullpen this season, but was forced into a spot start due to a day-night doubleheader on Saturday.

Matt Carpenter had four hits for the Cardinals and pushed his career-best hitting streak to 14 games.

The Diamondbacks erupted for five runs in the seventh off just-called up righty Maikel Cleto to take control 7-1. Wil Nieves started the uprising with an RBI single before Goldschmidt hit his 421-foot slam.

Gerardo Parra keyed a three-run eighth with a two-run single.

David Freese extended his hitting streak to a career-best 15 games with a single in the St. Louis sixth. It is the longest current run in the majors.

— Associated Press —

Royals fall to Twins for franchise-record 11th straight loss at home

RoyalsRyan Doumit homered and drove in a pair of runs Tuesday night, sending the Minnesota Twins to a 3-0 victory and the Kansas City Royals to their franchise-record 11th straight home loss.

Samuel Deduno (2-1) allowed four hits over six-plus innings for the Twins, who have rebounded nicely from a 10-game losing streak to win eight of 10. They also managed to exact a little revenge on the Royals, who swept them in early April – a three-game set that seems long ago.

While the Twins have soared, the Royals have lost 22 of their last 28 games.

The way Kansas City has been hitting lately, the game was basically decided when Doumit went deep off Luis Mendoza (1-3) leading off the fourth inning. But just to be safe, Doumit and Josh Willingham added RBI singles in the fifth inning to provide the Twins with a three-run cushion.

Glen Perkins pitched a perfect ninth for his 12th save.

Mendoza didn’t allow a hit until Doumit’s shot in the fourth. The right-hander escaped the inning, but four straight one-out hits in the fifth ultimately knocked him from game.

It was the 18th straight time that the Royals’ starter has failed to win a decision.

Their offense has been the biggest culprit: The Royals are hitting.183 with runners in scoring position since May 21, when they led the AL with a .308 average in such situations. That includes going 0 for 7 on Tuesday night, and 2 for 27 over their past three games.

It’s certainly not the start that Hall of Famer George Brett wanted to get off to as the team’s interim hitting coach. The Royals’ punchless offense has continued to scuffle in the five games since Jack Maloof and Andre David were reassigned and Brett given his familiar No. 5 jersey to wear.

Meanwhile, the Twins have headed in the opposite direction.

After enduring one of the longest losing streaks in franchise history, their offense has propelled the Twins to seven wins in their last eight games – four straight over Milwaukee and a series win over Seattle that was highlighted by a 10-0 blowout in the finale on Sunday.

Doumit has been one of the catalysts for the resurgence. After getting off to a slow start, he’s hitting .324 with four homers and 13 RBIs over his last eight games.

Of course, just about any offense would have been enough given the combination of the Royals’ weak hitting and the stingy work by Deduno and the Twins bullpen.

Deduno, who turned heads for the Dominican Republic in the World Baseball Classic, struck out five while walking just two. It was his second straight strong start after allowing one run on four hits in seven innings in a victory over the Brewers last Wednesday night.

Relievers Brian Duensing, Casey Fien and Jared Burton got through the seventh and eighth innings unscathed, and Perkins took care of the ninth. The Twins bullpen has combined to allow just four runs over their last 37 1-3 innings.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City claims Quintin Berry on outright waivers from Tigers

RoyalsThe Kansas City Royals today claimed outfielder Quintin Berry on waivers from the Detroit Tigers and immediately optioned him to Triple-A Omaha.

Berry, 28, is a left-handed hitter who spent a large part of last season on the Detroit roster, hitting .258 in 94 games (75-for-291) with 44 runs scored, 10 doubles, six triples, two home runs and 29 RBI.  The speedster also swiped 21 bases without being caught.

A fifth round pick of the Phillies in 2006 out of San Diego State, Berry has also been in the San Diego, New York Mets and Cincinnati organizations prior to joining the Tigers.  He has hit .168 in 49 games for Toledo (AAA) in the Tigers’ chain this year with 15 stolen bases and only two caught stealing.

— Royals Media Relations —

St. Louis rolls to big win over Arizona in series opener

CardsLance Lynn pitched seven solid innings and the St. Louis Cardinals got home runs from Yadier Molina and Carlos Beltran in a 7-1 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Monday night.

Lynn allowed one run and five hits, struck out six and walked one. He improved to 8-1 for the second consecutive season while becoming the third National League pitcher to reach eight wins, trailing Patrick Corbin’s league-leading nine for Arizona.

Molina hit a leadoff drive in the fifth on the same day he received a one-game suspension from Major League Baseball for making contact with umpire Mike Everitt during an argument on Sunday. The All-Star catcher appealed the decision.

Molina’s fourth homer lifted St. Louis to a 5-0 lead. He finished with two hits and two RBIs.

Arizona starter Trevor Cahill was charged with five runs and nine hits in five innings. He walked three and had no strikeouts for the first time this season.

Cahill (3-6) had allowed four earned runs or less in 29 consecutive starts.

The Diamondbacks got their only run in the sixth. Gerardo Parra had a leadoff double, moved up on Martin Prado’s flyout and came home on Paul Goldschmidt’s groundout.

Beltran and Matt Carpenter had three hits apiece for the Cardinals. Beltran’s 13th homer drove in Carpenter and made it 7-1 in the sixth. He also drove in Carpenter in the fourth with a single.

The Cardinals went 5 for 8 with runners in scoring position against the usually stout Cahill. Entering the game, batters had just a .111 average against him in that situation.

David Freese singled in Molina in the third, making it 3-0 and extending his hitting streak to a career-high 13 games. Molina singled in Matt Holliday, before taking second on the throw home and third on a wild pitch.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City’s offense struggles again in 3-1 loss at Texas

RoyalsJurickson Profar sprinted around the bases with a big smile after putting the Rangers ahead for good.

Maybe the only person happier than the 20-year-old rookie was his veteran manager.

Profar hit a tiebreaking home run with two outs in the eighth inning Sunday, lifting the Texas Rangers over the Kansas City Royals 3-1 on Sunday.

The 20-year-old Profar connected off J.C. Gutierrez (0-1) for his second homer, a solo shot that put Texas ahead 2-1.

Manager Ron Washington was the first to greet Profar in the dugout. With a big grin of his own, Washington snagged the batting helmet off Profar’s head before he was mobbed by teammates.

”What I get a kick out of is he’s not afraid of baseball,” Washington said. ”Opportunities like today are what that young kid lives for. No one in the ballpark expected that. But he gave us a lift right there. He rose to the occasion.”

Profar was recalled from the minors to replace injured second baseman Ian Kinsler on May 19.

The top prospect is hitting .324 and hit his second homer in 10 games this season.

”I was just trying to get on base,” Profar said. ”I guess I did a little better there.”

David Murphy added an RBI single later in the inning to make it 3-1.

Tanner Scheppers (4-0) got two outs in the eighth and Joe Nathan pitched a perfect ninth for his 17th save in 18 chances.

Yu Darvish allowed three hits, walked two and struck out six as he left with a 1-0 lead after seven innings.

After the game, Darvish said he felt fatigued after throwing 99 pitches. Washington added Darvish told him he was out of gas and didn’t want the Japanese ace to fight through another inning.

Neal Cotts replaced Darvish to start the eighth.

”Any time I throw more than seven innings, I always feel fatigued after that,” Darvish said through an interpreter. ”So it was nothing special today.”

Alex Gordon doubled in the Kansas City eighth and scored on a grounder to make it 1-all.

The Rangers only had three singles coming into the eighth.

Gutierrez retired the first two batters of the inning before Profar came up to the plate. He lined a 1-2 pitch into the seats in right.

Elvis Andrus was on deck and joked about Profar’s speed rounding the bases.

”That was really quick,” Andrus said. ”He’s going to hit plenty of homers in his career so he needs to work on that. He’s fun to watch.”

Rangers center fielder Craig Gentry threw out Billy Butler at home trying to score early as first-place Texas won for the third time in four games.

The Rangers were without All-Star third baseman Adrian Beltre, who didn’t play because of a strained left hamstring. Washington said Beltre may be back in the lineup for Tuesday night’s game against the Boston Red Sox.

Andrus wasn’t in the original starting lineup as he’s been hampered by a sore back in the past week. The shortstop, however, said he felt good when he woke up and convinced Washington he was ready to play.

Kansas City starter Ervin Santana allowed an unearned run and three singles in seven innings. The right-hander had lost his past four starts coming in.

The Royals haven’t scored more than four runs in a game since May 21 and have lost 10 of 12. Kansas City, which brought on Hall of Famer George Brett as interim hitting coach Thursday, scored only seven runs in dropping two of three to Texas.

”We were right there,” Butler said. ”We were one pitch away, one hit away at every point in that game. It’s very frustrating.”

Santana didn’t allow a hit until Nelson Cruz singled with one out in the fourth.

Gordon, who snapped an 0-for-14 rut earlier in the game, led off the eighth with a broken-bat double against Cotts. Alcides Escobar had a sacrifice bunt that moved Gordon to third.

Eric Hosmer hit a chopper to Jeff Baker, who played third base in place of Beltre. Baker’s throw home was wild and Gordon scored easily to tie the game.

With the bases loaded and no outs in the second, Jeff Francoeur hit a liner to center and Gentry made a running catch. Gentry made a perfect throw to home plate and catcher Geovany Soto just got the tag on a sliding Butler.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals lose series finale against San Francisco

CardsChad Gaudin found himself in an unfamiliar position Sunday afternoon.

The San Francisco right-hander took the mound to start a game for the first time in over three years and tossed six strong innings to lead the Giants to a 4-2 win over the St. Louis Cardinals, ending the Giants’ seven-game road skid.

Brandon Belt hit a two-run pinch-hit double to break a 2-2 tie in the seventh. Buster Posey, who entered the game in a 2 for 20 skid, went 4 for 4 with two doubles to pace an 11-hit attack.

Gaudin (1-1), in his first start since Sept. 28, 2009 as a member of the New York Yankees, allowed four hits and two runs, both coming on David Freese’s homer in the fourth. He struck out five and did not walk a batter. Gaudin, who set the side down in order in four of six innings, is temporarily replacing Ryan Vogelsong in the rotation. Vogelsong broke several bones in his right hand May 20.

”It was nice,” Gaudin said of the starting assignment, ”I made a couple of minor league starts, but it was refreshing to get back out there and do that.”

San Francisco manager Bruce Bochy said Gaudin’s performance came at a perfect time for his beleaguered staff.

”He gave us a huge shot in the arm,” he said. ”He went out there and threw quality strikes and actually went a little further than we ever thought.”

Bochy said before the game that he was hoping to get four, maybe five innings from Gaudin.

Instead, Gaudin rolled through six on 79 pitches, 55 strikes. In his first start after 117 successive relief appearances, Gaudin earned his first win since Oct. 2, 2012 when he was a reliever with the Miami Marlins.

”I wanted to go out there and give the team a chance to win and also give them some innings,” Gaudin said. ”I thought I was throwing aggressively and pitching with what I had.”

The Giants offense, which had scored just seven runs in its previous six road games, gave Gaudin enough offensive support.

Belt slammed the first pitch from reliever Randy Choate into the gap in left-center to bring in Brandon Crawford and Gregor Blanco for a 4-2 lead in the seventh inning. Crawford began the rally with a single off St. Louis rookie Tyler Lyons (2-1).

Closer Sergio Romo recorded four outs for his 15th save in 17 opportunities. He got Freese to ground out with Allen Craig on first to end the game.

San Francisco scored single runs in the second and third off Lyons. Posey and Hunter Pence hit back-to-back doubles in the third.

”I hit a couple balls hard that found a couple of holes,” Posey said. ”So now, it’s just a matter of keeping on.”

Posey raised his average 15 points to .308 with the four-hit effort.

Freese tied the game with his third homer of the season. He has hit safely in a career-tying 12 successive games.

”I’m seeing the baseball and trying to consistently hit the ball hard somewhere,” he said. ”It’s all about the approach at the plate.”

Lyons allowed four runs and eight hits in 6 2-3 innings in his third start. He allowed one run over seven innings in winning his two previous starts.

”I was inconsistent from the beginning,” Lyons said. ”I was fighting myself, just trying my best to eat up a few innings.”

Despite the victory, the Giants have dropped six of their last eight..

”A much-needed win after yesterday,” Bochy said.

St. Louis beat the Giants 8-0 and 7-1 in a day-night doubleheader on Saturday.

St. Louis manager Mike Matheny and catcher Yadier Molina were ejected in the third inning by first base umpire Clint Fagan after Molina was called out on a close play at first. Molina slammed his helmet to the ground after the call and was immediately thrown out for the third time in his career. Matheny came out to protect Molina and was ejected for the third time as a manager.

”I know I was out,” Molina said. ”I was just upset with myself.”

— Associated Press —

Royals take down Texas in 10 innings, 4-1

RoyalsDavid Lough was willing to endure a little pain to help the Kansas City Royals win.

Robbie Ross hit Lough with a pitch with the bases loaded to force in the go-ahead run in the 10th inning, and the Royals beat the Texas Rangers 4-1 Saturday.

Lough thought he had a broken right wrist when he left the game after getting plunked. His fears worsened when he couldn’t move his fingers for about 20 minutes.

Lough was finally able to enjoy the three-run 10th inning that lifted the Royals to only their second win in 11 games.

”I had the X-rays and a lot of strength came back in my arm after that,” Lough said. ”I’m glad we got the win more than anything.”

Ross (2-1) had only allowed one run in 24-1-3 innings this season before Saturday.

The left-hander gave up a leadoff single to Alcides Escobar in the 10th. Eric Hosmer followed with a single and Billy Butler was intentionally walked to load the bases. Ross struck out Mike Moustakas and Lorenzo Cain before Lough came up. Lough was hit on a 2-1 pitch to force in the go-ahead run.

That snapped Ross’ scoring streak at 20 1-3 innings.

”Stuff is going to happen no matter what,” Ross said. ”I have to bounce back and get back to helping the team win.”

Lough left the game after getting plunked with a fastball in the right arm. The rookie outfielder tried to stay in the game but slowly walked off the field in obvious pain as he was replaced by pinch-runner Jeff Francoeur.

George Kottaras, who entered the game in the ninth inning, lined a two-run double over the head of Nelson Cruz in right.

The Royals had only scored 22 runs in their past 10 games and were 0 for 9 with runners in scoring position before Kottaras broke the game open.

”It was a big win,” Kansas City manager Ned Yost said. ”(Ross) is one of their guys who has been throwing good.”

Aaron Crow (1-1) pitched 1 1-3 innings of scoreless relief and Greg Holland worked a perfect 10th for his ninth save in 11 chances.

The Rangers had runners on second and third with two outs in the ninth but Crow retired Jurickson Profar on a foul pop to end the threat.

James Shields, who had lost his last four starts, allowed one run in seven innings as he looked to win for the first time since April 30. He gave up five hits, struck out five and walked one.

In Shields’ previous four starts, the Royals had only scored seven runs behind him.

”I don’t care about run support as much as winning the game,” Shields said. ”I’ve got to do a better job pitching.”

Nick Tepesch made his first career start against his hometown team and allowed an unearned run in 6 1-3 innings. The rookie gave up seven hits and struck out two.

Texas third baseman Adrian Beltre left the game after the ninth inning with tightness in his left hamstring. Beltre was injured running the bases in the fourth.

Rangers manager Ron Washington said Beltre is day to day.

Texas designated hitter Lance Berkman was ejected for arguing a called third strike in the first inning.

Berkman took a 2-2 pitch from Shields that home plate umpire Todd Tichenor ruled was a third strike.

The Rangers’ first-year designated hitter was tossed from the game after a brief argument with Tichenor.

”I didn’t think I said or did anything that would warrant the ejection,” Berkman said ”But he obviously felt different.”

Shields retired 10 in a row before the Rangers scored in the fourth.

Beltre and Cruz singled with two outs. Mitch Moreland then lofted a soft single to center that scored Beltre and put the Rangers ahead 1-0.

Tepesch grew up in Blue Springs, Mo., about 15 minutes from Kansas City’s Kauffman Stadium. The right-hander needed only eight pitches to retire the side in the first and recorded nine groundball outs through four innings.

Kansas City tied the game in the fifth when Lough singled with one out and scored on A.J. Pierzynski’s passed ball.

— Associated Press —

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