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Kansas City signs 13 rookie free agents

riggertChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Wednesday that the club has agreed to terms with the following 13 rookie free agents:

QB Tyler Bray (6-6, 215) played in 28 games (24 starts) with Tennessee completing 540 passes on 922 attempts (58.6 pct.) for 7,444 yards with 69 touchdowns and 28 interceptions. Bray prepped at Kingsburg High School in Kingsburg, Calif.

LB Darin Drakeford (6-1, 240) played in 32 games (eight starts) at Maryland, recording 122 tackles (72 solo), including 9.5 behind the line of scrimmage, 2.0 sacks, five forced fumbles, one fumble recovery, two passes defensed and an interception. He prepped at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Washington, D.C. where he was a four-time All-DCIAA choice.

DB Otha Foster (6-0, 204) played in 24 games at West Alabama, recording 96 tackles (62 solo), 10 interceptions and 19 passes defensed. He spent two years at Pear River Community College prior to joining the Tigers. He prepped at Varnado High School in Angie, La.

WR Frankie Hammond Jr. (6-1, 184) played in 48 games (19 starts) at Florida, recording 63 catches for 809 yards and six touchdowns. He returned seven punts for 21 yards and a kickoff for 23 yards. He was a third-team Class 4A all-state selection at Hallandale High School in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

TE Demetrius Harris (6-7, 230) played basketball for UW-Milwaukee serving as the team’s power forward. Harris originally signed on to play football at Arkansas State after high school but then decided to pursue his basketball career. The Jacksonville, Ark., native was an all-state football player at Jacksonville High School.

OL A.J. Hawkins (6-1, 310) played in 39 games (29 starts) seeing action at right guard and center at Ole Miss. He earned first-team Class 5A all-state honors from the Georgia Sports Writers Association while at Martin Luther King High school in Lithonia, Ga.

OL Colin Kelly (6-5, 298) played in 48 games (25 starts) at Oregon State. He was a two-time first-team Greater St. Helens League selection at tight end at Kelso High School in Kelso, Wash.

DE Rob Lohr (6-4, 290) played in 49 games (38 starts) at Vanderbilt. His career numbers include 120 tackles (71 solo), 31.5 tackles for loss, 11.0 sacks (-55.0 yards), five QB pressures, two forced fumbles and one fumble recovery. He played tight end and defensive end as a prep at Phoenixville High School in Phoenixville, Pa.

DL Brad Madison (6-4, 265) played in 50 games for the University of Missouri, recording 76 tackles (48 solo), 26.5 tackles for loss, 16.0 sacks (-124.0 yards), four forced fumbles and one fumble recovery. He added one interception and four passes defensed with the Tigers. He was a multi-sport athlete at South Harrison High School in Bethany, Mo.

LB/DE Josh Martin (6-3, 245) played in 30 games for Columbia University in the City of New York, tallying 140 tackles (85 solo), 29.5 tackles for loss, 17.5 sacks (-118.0 yards), two forced fumbles, five fumble recoveries and two passes defensed. Martin played both offense and defense at Cherokee Trail High School in Aurora, Colo.

S Brad McDougald (6-1, 209) played in 47 games (33 starts) seeing action on both sides of the ball at Kansas. He recorded 194 tackles (148 solo), 16 tackles for a loss, 2.0 sacks, six interceptions, 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.

WR Rico Richardson (6-1, 185) played in 40 games (20 starts) at Jackson State, recording 130 catches for 2,491 yards (19.2 avg.) and 23 touchdowns. He earned first-team all-region honors at Natchez High School in Natchez, Miss.

WR Ridge Wilson (6-4, 256) played in 32 games at West Alabama, recording 78 tackles (35 solo), 3.5 sacks (-17.0 yards), two fumble recoveries, one interception and two passes defensed. The Louisville, Ky., native, prepped at Central High School in Louisville, Ky.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Shields defeats former team as KC tops Tampa, 8-2

RoyalsJames Shields admitted that it felt a little weird when he stepped on the mound for Kansas City on Tuesday night, peered into the batter’s box and saw a former Rays teammate standing at the plate.

”That’s a team over that knows me real well,” Shields said.

Turns out Shields knows them even better.

After allowing a two-run homer to Matt Joyce in the first, Shields only allowed three more hits over the next six innings. That kept the Royals in the game long enough for Mike Moustakas to hit a go-ahead two-run homer and spur Kansas City to an 8-2 victory over Tampa Bay in the series opener.

”It was pretty obvious the emotion was really, really high,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”James has really bonded with his teammates, and I think his teammates knew how big of a game it was for him.”

Kansas City has been looking for a legitimate No. 1 starter for years, and finally made the bold decision in December to acquire Shields and fellow right-hander Wade Davis from Tampa Bay for a package of prospects that included minor league player of the year Wil Myers.

The Rays’ career leader in just about every significant pitching category, Shields (2-2) hasn’t done anything to disappoint his new organization. He lost 1-0 to the White Sox on opening day, tossed a complete game in a 3-2 loss to Toronto, and has gone at least six innings in every start.

On Tuesday night, he helped the Royals snap a two-game skid and finish 14-10 in April, a dramatic improvement from the 6-15 mark that they carried into May a year ago.

”He looked a little different standing out there in a different uniform,” said the Rays’ Desmond Jennings. ”He was mixing up his pitches – he was Shields. He’s good, man.”

Early on, Shields may have been too amped up facing his former team.

Jennings singled off his first pitch and Joyce followed with his homer over the right-field wall. It was the 15th straight game in which Tampa Bay hit a home run, tying the franchise record.

”The first hit of the game, a little check-swing by Des, and I fell behind the count against Joyce, and you can’t do that,” Shields said. ”I knew I had to grind it out.”

Meanwhile, Alex Cobb (3-2) was keeping the Royals’ scuffling offense at bay.

The Rays’ starter allowed just four hits over the first five innings, and at one point, the only ball hit out of the infield over a span of 12 batters was a measly single by Elliott Johnson.

”He threw the ball great for them, mixing his pitches,” Moustakas said. ”One inning, you know, kind of turned the game around for us.”

That inning came in the sixth.

Cobb had retired the first two batters Eric Hosmer doubled and Lorenzo Cain drove him in with a single, snapping the Royals’ streak of 15 consecutive scoreless innings.

Moustakas then connected against Cobb over the right-field fence for his first homer since Sept. 14, a span of 129 at-bats. Jeff Francoeur followed with a double and Salvador Perez’s RBI single made it 4-2. Cobb was lifted when Johnson singled again, ending his night after 5 2-3 innings.

”When I walked off the mound, I think that was the most angry I’ve ever been after a game,” said Cobb, who pitched into the ninth inning against the Yankees his last time out. ”I felt like from pitch number-one, I was going to have a smooth, easy-sailing game and go as deep as I could.”

Cobb wound up allowing four runs on 10 hits.

”It fell apart very quickly and that was unusual to see,” Rays manager Joe Maddon said. ”Shields was really good. Cobb was outstanding to that moment.”

The Royals built a cushion in the seventh off Rays reliever Brandon Gomes. Moustakas hit a sacrifice fly with the bases loaded, and Hosmer scored from third when Cain stole second and catcher Jose Molina threw the ball into center field.

Francoeur followed with an RBI triple, giving the Royals a 7-2 lead and Shields the rest of the night off. The Kansas City bullpen pitched two scoreless innings to finish things up.

”The guys had my back – they always do – and that’s what this team is all about,” Shields said. ”We’re real resilient. We had a couple of tough losses, but we fought back hard tonight. We have a lot of character on this team and we showed it again tonight.”

— Associated Press —

Holliday’s home run lifts Cardinals past Cincinnati

CardsJaime Garcia seems to save his best for the Cincinnati Reds.

The St. Louis left-hander dominated Cincinnati again with eight strong innings, Matt Holliday hit a two-run homer and the Cardinals snapped a three-game losing streak with a 2-1 win over the Reds on Tuesday night.

Garcia (3-1) gave up one run on seven hits, struck out three and did not walk a batter. He improved to 7-0 in eight starts against Cincinnati at Busch Stadium and is 9-2 overall with a 3.18 ERA against them in 13 starts. He retired the last seven batters he faced and recorded 18 ground ball outs.

”They’ve got a really strong lineup and they take good at-bats,” Garcia said. ”I just try to make good pitches against them and it’s been working.”

Edward Mujica struck out the side in the ninth for his fifth save in as many chances.

Bronson Arroyo (2-3) allowed two runs on six hits over seven innings for the Reds, whose win streak ended at three games. Arroyo has had four quality starts in six outings this season.

Holliday drilled a line drive over the left-field wall in the sixth inning, his third homer of the season. Carlos Beltran, who had three hits for the Cardinals, had singled with one out before Holliday went deep.

The shot left the park in a hurry.

”I hit it good with some backspin,” Holliday said. ”It wasn’t a no-doubter, but I wasn’t surprised.”

Holliday’s first homer since April 19 decided a well-played contest between the two NL Central rivals.

”We hate to lose it, but that was a great game,” Cincinnati manager Dusty Baker said. ”If we keep playing like that, and get pitching like that, we’re going to win a lot of ballgames.”

Holliday muscled a 3-2 offering from Arroyo into the first few rows of the stands.

Arroyo said he put the pitch in the desired location.

”The guy is a beast,” Arroyo said of Holliday. ”He’s solid and he swings the bat about as hard as anyone in the game. There’s only a handful of guys that hit the ball with such a low trajectory and get it out.”

The Cardinals managed just one run in their previous 23 innings prior to the homer.

Garcia, given a 2-1 lead, set the side down in order in the seventh and eighth innings with six ground ball outs.

”With the defense we have, you want to make them hit the ball on the ground,” Garcia said. ”I’m confident that they’ll make the plays.”

Cincinnati took a 1-0 lead in the fifth on a run-scoring double by Shin-Soo Choo, who has reached safely in 26 of 27 games this season. He brought in Derrick Robinson with a drive off the left-field wall. Choo broke out of a 2-for-20 skid with the double, his eighth of the season.

Mujica, who has taken over the closer role, needed just 19 pitches to fan Joey Votto, Brandon Phillips and Jay Bruce.

”That’s a tough assignment with that lineup,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. ”He just goes out there regardless of the situation and makes pitches.”

— Associated Press —

Royals get blanked by Jimenez, Indians in series finale

RoyalsFrom the moment that Ubaldo Jimenez started to warm up in the bullpen, and noticed the run on his fastball, he had a pretty good idea that this night would be unlike any other this season.

Any other in quite a while, for that matter.

The Indians’ right-hander baffled the Kansas City Royals while pitching into the eighth inning, Ryan Raburn belted two home runs to pace the Cleveland offense, and the result was a 9-0 win Monday night that salvaged a split of a four-game series.

”It felt really good,” said Jimenez, who hadn’t won in his past 12 starts. ”When I saw the run on my fastball, I said, ‘We have to take advantage of that.”’

Jimenez (1-2) certainly did, allowing only two walks and an infield single by Billy Butler over his first seven innings.

Along the way, he started to resemble the pitcher who once threw a no-hitter for the Colorado Rockies and earned a spot in the All-Star game.

”You’re always looking to be encouraged,” Indians manager Terry Francona said, ”but we flew right past encouraged and got sideways. … That was just so much delight tonight.”

The Royals couldn’t have gotten a more different outing from Wade Davis.

The right-hander was shelled for the second straight start, this time allowing eight runs and 12 hits and three walks in 4 2-3 innings. Davis (2-2) only last 3 2-3 innings his last time out.

”I made some bad decisions and didn’t execute,” Davis said.

The Royals won the first two games of the series, but were outscored 19-3 over the final two, unable to solve spot starter Corey Kluber on Sunday night and baffled by Jimenez on Monday.

A former All-Star, Jimenez has struggled mightily over the past couple of years, and hadn’t won a game since Aug. 9, 2012. He’d lost his last eight decisions, and had been especially dreadful of late, allowing 18 earned runs in 11 innings over his past three outings.

The Royals couldn’t solve him, though.

Jimenez faced the minimum number of batters through the first three innings, and would have been flirting with another no-hitter had Butler not hit a grounder to the right of shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera with two gone in the fourth. Cabrera was too deep in the hole to throw out Butler at first base, resulting in the Royals’ only hit until the eighth inning.

”Any time you have an outing like Ubaldo’s,” Raburn said, ”it makes it all more fun.”

Jason Kipnis hit his first home run since Sept. 13 with one out in the first for Cleveland, and Michael Brantley’s leadoff double and a base hit by Cabrera in the third made it 2-0.

Davis kept minimizing the damage until the fifth, when Brantley’s one-out double again stirred up trouble. Kipnis walked and Cabrera followed with an RBI double. Mark Reynolds added a two-out base hit, and Carlos Santana’s run-scoring double pushed Cleveland’s lead to 5-0 lead.

Royals pitching coach Dave Eiland came out to visit Davis, but it didn’t do much good. Raburn’s three-run shot, his first homer since May 15, 2012, finally chased him from the game.

”A tough night. They hit some good pitches off Wade, but they hit some mistakes, too,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”Wade wasn’t up in the zone, but a lot of the balls they hit were catching a little too much of the plate down.”

Mike Moustakas doubled leading off the eighth against Jimenez, and a single by Jeff Francoeur finally ended his night. Reliever Nick Hagadone left both runners stranded by retiring three straight batters, though, preserving Jimenez’s fine performance.

”He threw the ball well,” Moustakas said. ”He got ahead of us early and mixed his pitches well. That’s a great pitcher out there. His track record speaks for itself. We had an off-day. He was mixing in three or four pitches. He had a good sinker with good action. He was getting ahead 0-1 and putting us in a hole nearly every at-bat.”

— Associated Press —

St. Louis drops third straight as they fall to Cincinnati, 2-1

CardsMat Latos outpitched Adam Wainwright, extending his scoreless innings streak to 17, and the Cincinnati Reds got an RBI apiece from Joey Votto and Xavier Paul in a 2-1 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Monday night.

Aroldis Chapman worked a perfect ninth for his sixth save in six chances, finishing off only the third road victory in 11 games for the Reds and handing St. Louis its third straight loss.

Yadier Molina had three of the Cardinals’ seven hits, including an RBI double off Jonathan Broxton that produced their first run in 17 innings. The Cardinals stranded 10 runners.

Wainwright (4-2) trailed just six pitches in after Shin-soo Choo doubled on his first offering, advanced on a sacrifice and scored on Votto’s single. Over his final six innings, the right-hander gave up three hits and one run on Paul’s broken-bat forceout grounder in the fourth set up by hits from Brandon Phillips and Todd Frazier.

Wainwright walked two, one intentionally, after issuing just one in 37 1-3 innings his first five starts.

Latos (2-0) worked around five hits and three walks in his sixth quality start in as many outings this season. The Reds have scored just four runs in his last three appearances.

The Cardinals, who entered with a major league-leading .355 average with runners in scoring position, had two base runners in an inning four times against Latos. Allen Craig, who came in 7 for 11 with runners in scoring position and two outs, failed twice in that situation with forceouts to end the third and fifth innings.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City splits Sunday doubleheader with Indians

RoyalsMike Aviles hit a three-run homer and finished with a career-high five RBIs, and the Cleveland Indians beat the Kansas City Royals 10-3 on Sunday night to split the first day-night doubleheader in Kauffman Stadium history.

The Royals’ Jeremy Guthrie shut down Cleveland in a 9-0 victory in the opener, but Will Smith (0-1) couldn’t do the same after getting recalled from Triple-A Omaha for the night-cap.

The Indians scored twice off Smith in the second inning. Aviles hit his homer in the third, and then he added sacrifice flies in the fourth and seventh innings against his former team.

Corey Kluber yielded only Chris Getz’s two-run blooper in the fourth in a stellar spot start for Cleveland. Kluber (2-0) lasted seven innings and retired his final 10 batters.

Carlos Santana had four hits and drove in a run in Game 2 for the Indians, while the Royals committed three errors that helped lead to four unearned runs.

In the opener of a doubleheader caused by Friday night’s rainout, Guthrie (3-0) allowed six hits over 6 2-3 innings for his 16th consecutive start without a loss. That matched the Kansas City record set by Paul Splittorff from Aug. 13, 1977-April 22, 1978.

”I knew it’s been a number of starts in a row, because people kept reminding me of it,” Guthrie said with a smile. ”Ultimately, it means a lot because hopefully the guys behind me when I go out are confident that we have a chance to win the game.”

Confidence was perhaps the biggest thing that Guthrie was missing last season in Colorado. He was just 3-9 with a 6.35 ERA before a trade to Kansas City, but went 5-3 with a 3.16 ERA the rest of the way, earning a $25 million, three-year contract from the Royals in November.

Guthrie’s gone at least six innings in all four of his starts this season.

”I have the kind of confidence I want to go into each start with,” he said, ”that good stuff or not, I can keep us in it and give us a chance to win the game.”

Alcides Escobar and Alex Gordon homered to pace Kansas City.

Escobar’s solo shot came in the fifth inning and Gordon’s two-run homer came in the eighth, capping a big afternoon for the Royals offense. Jarrod Dyson also drove in a pair of runs, and Mike Moustakas had a single and three walks – one with the bases loaded.

”The walks to Moustakas were big,” Indians manager Terry Francona conceded.

Justin Masterson (4-2) allowed seven runs in 6 1-3 innings for the Indians. The right-hander, who entered the game with a 1.85 ERA, was trying to join Bob Lemon, Greg Swindell and Cliff Lee as the only pitchers in franchise history with five wins in April.

Instead, Masterson got roughed up by the bottom of the Royals’ lineup.

”Justin Masterson is such a good pitcher, and going into the game, my mind was prepared for a low-scoring affair,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”I thought we’d have to squeak out some runs.”

So much for that. The only close call off Guthrie came in the second inning.

Santana hit a drive to center that hit off the green padding atop the wall. The ball bounced back into play and was ruled a double, and the call was upheld when the umpires checked the replay. Santana was left stranded when Guthrie retired Ryan Raburn and Lonnie Chisenhall.

”It was close,” Francona said. ”I wish it had went about 2 inches further.”

— Associated Press —

Cardinals get shutout by Pittsburgh in series finale

CardsIt was a milestone day for the Pittsburgh Pirates, who took the NL Central lead for the first time since last July and reached 15 wins in April for the first time since 1992.

Manager Clint Hurdle thought his 700th career victory was a footnote at best, considering he has 808 losses. Players gave him a toast all the same.

”It means you’re gifted and blessed with the opportunity to do this for a while,” Hurdle said after the Pirates beat the Cardinals 9-0 Sunday for a series win and the division lead. ”You don’t talk about the other number because the other number is bigger.”

Rookie Jeff Locke gave a salute to his manager after pitching seven innings of three-hit ball and Russell Martin had two of Pittsburgh’s four home runs.

”It’s special to be the guy on the mound that day,” Locke said. ”I was awfully happy for him, and it’s not the last one.”

Garrett Jones had three hits and John McDonald had a key bloop RBI double for Pittsburgh, which ended rookie Shelby Miller’s streak of 14 scoreless innings at home to start the season. The Pirates have won nine of 12 overall and have the division lead for the first time since July 8, leapfrogging St. Louis for first place.

”It helps us believe we have the team we think we have,” Martin said. ”The key is to be consistent and do it every day, and we’ve been doing it every day.”

Locke (3-1) has worked 13 scoreless innings while allowing five hits his last two starts. The Cardinals got just three singles and advanced two runners into scoring position against the 25-year-old left-hander, who earned the fifth spot in the rotation with a strong spring.

Justin Wilson allowed a walk the last two innings to wrap up the Pirates’ fifth shutout, tied for the league lead with St. Louis and San Francisco. All of them have been collaborations.

The Cardinals lost consecutive games for the first time this season, managing just 11 hits. They didn’t get much going against Locke after some hard outs the first time through the order.

”It looked like good things were going to be coming the second time through,” manager Mike Matheny said. ”He mixed it up, kept us off-balance, and just shut us down.”

Miller (3-2) struggled to put away hitters and was taken out after 113 pitches and giving up two homers in 5 2-3 innings. He struck out seven, one off his season best, and was charged with a three runs after John McDonald greeted Fernando Salas with a well-placed pop fly that barely dropped in for an RBI double.

The 22-year-old rookie, who entered among the NL leaders with a 1.44 ERA, said he simply left too many pitches up.

”I probably can’t even count on my fingers how many balls I threw down in the zone,” Miller said. ”The ball might have been carrying a little bit, but that’s no excuse.

”I’m still getting hit hard, they were seeing the ball well.”

Left fielder Matt Holliday took a circuitous route and just missed a diving catch with the ball deflecting off his left wrist, and Brandon Inge scored from first on a close play at the plate for a 3-0 lead.

Martin hit his fourth homer with a 412-foot drive to straightaway center in the second. He doubled off the right-field fence in the fourth for his fourth straight extra-base hit, two of them homers, then added a two-run shot to cap a five-run ninth.

It was the seventh career multi-homer game and first since June 10-12, 2012, for the Yankees against the Mets for Martin, who’s hitting .409 since April 15 and batting .267 overall after going hitless in 17 at-bats his first seven games.

”I think it’s just the law of averages,” Martin said. ”Everything that happened earlier in the year is now going my way right now.

”Balls that are pretty much left over the plate, I’m not missing right now.”

Tabata lined a 2-2 pitch over the right-field wall in the fifth for his first homer, giving him a hit in 21 of 23 career games at Busch Stadium.

Jones’ second homer and first in 50 at-bats since April 8 barely cleared Shane Robinson’s leaping attempt the wall in the seventh to make it 4-0. First base umpire Laz Diaz initially ruled no homer, but it was quickly overturned after the Pirates appealed.

Mitchell Boggs allowed two hits and a run-scoring groundout by Gaby Sanchez in the ninth, and was charged with three runs in two-thirds of an inning. Boggs lost the closer’s job earlier this month and has allowed 15 earned runs in 10 2-3 innings.

Boggs and Matheny both thought the pitcher deserved better this time. After deconstructing his outing, Boggs struck a note of defiance.

”Yeah, it’s hard to be positive, but at the same time you have to do everything you can to fight every single day and I’m doing that,” Boggs said. ”If anybody can’t see that, they’re crazy.”

— Associated Press —

Missouri Western DE David Bass drafted by Raiders in the 7th round

David BassIn the seventh round of the NFL Draft Saturday, the Oakland Raiders selected Missouri Western defensive end David Bass with the 233rd overall pick. He is a guy that most college football viewers ave never seen or heard of, but he has some serious talent. He was a four-year starter in college and dominated the competition. He broke the school record for sacks by tallying 39.5 in his career.

Bass measures in at 6’4″, 262 lbs. He ran a relatively sluggish 40 at 4.79 seconds, which knocked his stock down. He still had a fifth round grade from some observers. Bass played in the East-West Shrine Game and shined during practices against high level competition, showing that the promise and ability displayed on tape was not a fluke. Bass clearly would have excelled no matter what school he had attended.

It is likely that Bass can be a hybrid DE/OLB in the NFL and allow the Raiders to more effectively switch from 4-3 to 3-4 and back again at will. He is extremely quick and can diagnose plays easily to disrupt the offense. He has natural pass rushing moves and good speed off the edge, playing faster than his 40 time would suggest.

Hopefully, the acquisition of Bass will enable Jason Tarver to further implement his hybrid defense. Bass can both defend the run and rush the pass from the DE or OLB position. He seems to be a key piece going forward as Oakland seeks to establish its defensive scheme with new personnel.

— SilverAndBlackPride.com —

Kansas City wins series opener against Cleveland

RoyalsErvin Santana pitched seven scoreless innings, Salvador Perez hit a two-run homer and the Kansas City Royals held on to beat the Cleveland Indians 3-2 Saturday night.

Santana (3-1), who was acquired in an Oct. 31 trade with Anaheim for minor-league pitcher Brandon Sisk, allowed six singles, struck out five and walked none.

Greg Holland, who logged his sixth save in seven opportunities, gave up two unearned runs in the ninth on a Michael Brantley two-out triple, which scored Mark Reynolds, who had an infield single, and Lonnie Chisenhall, who reached on Eric Hosmer’s error. Holland struck out Jason Kipnis to end the game.

The Indians have scored three runs or less in eight of their past 10 games and 13 times this season, going 3-10 in those games.

Scott Kazmir (0-1), who was making his second big league start in two years, was charged the loss. He gave up two runs on five hits, while striking out four and walking two. In his previous start, the Indians scored 19 runs and were ahead 14-0 going into the bottom of the second at Houston, but Kazmir failed to get out of the fourth inning, giving up six runs on eight hits, including two homers.

Kazmir, a two-time American League All-Star selection while with Tampa Bay, pitched last season with the Sugar Land Skeeters in the independent Atlantic League and signed a minor league contact with the Indians in January. He won a slot in the Cleveland rotation after a strong spring training.

Perez homered just inside the right-field foul pole in the second inning on an 0-1 pitch from Kazmir after he walked Jeff Francoeur.

The Indians had five base runners in the second and third innings, but failed to score.

Drew Stubbs, Kipnis and Asdrubal Cabrera singled in the third, loading the bases with one out. Nick Swisher grounded into a double play to end the inning.

Swisher led off the second with a single and Carlos Santana reached on a Miguel Tejada error. Ervin Santana struck out Reynolds and Chisenhall to end the threat.

The Indians used five relief pitchers in the seventh when the Royals added a run. Alex Gordon’s two-out single was the only hit. The inning included Bryan Shaw walking the only two batters he faced and Rich Hill walking Eric Hosmer, the only batter he faced, with the bases loaded to score Gordon.

Herrera replaced Santana and promptly gave up a leadoff double to Michael Brantley to lead off the eighth. Brantley went to third on a wild pitch, but was stranded.

— Associated Press —

Four-run seventh dooms Cardinals in loss to Pittsburgh

CardsRussell Martin wanted a better fate for his starting pitcher and helped deliver a happier ending.

The Pittsburgh Pirates catcher hit a two-run home run to highlight a four-run seventh inning and the Pirates rallied to beat the St. Louis Cardinals 5-3 on Saturday. The comeback gave A.J. Burnett (2-2) his second victory over St. Louis in 10 days.

”It was great, man. I was really happy about that,” said Martin, who went 2-for-4 with a double. ”A.J.’s been pitching his butt off all year and he hasn’t had too many wins under his belt and he should. It seemed like it was going to go like kind of how it’s been but we were able to muster up some wins and find a way to do it for him.

”It’s definitely gratifying. It feels great.”

Burnett gave up two runs and five hits in six innings. His six strikeouts expanded his team record for the month of April to a league-leading 48. Burnett threw seven shutout innings in a 5-0 win over St. Louis on April 17.

He hasn’t allowed more than three earned runs in his six starts this season, giving up three just twice. The Pirates haven’t backed him at the plate, however, providing him an average of 2.33 runs.

Burnett used 111 pitches earning an exit earlier than he wanted but he was pleased with his results and the victory.

”It feels good just because the fact that these guys keep going,” he said. ”Russ started us off with the homer. We’re never out of it. We’re never down. There’s no negative thoughts.

”As a starter, I’m going to try to keep doing that until (manager) Clint (Hurdle) takes me out.”

St. Louis starter Jake Westbrook left after six innings with a 2-0 lead in search of his 100th career victory. He struck out a season-high six and scattered six hits to lower his ERA to 0.98 in five starts.

The Pirates had three consecutive hits against reliever Joe Kelly (0-1) to lead off the seventh and were aided by a hit by pitch and a walk to score four runs. Martin’s fifth homer of the season drove in Pedro Alvarez to tie the score at 2, Andrew McCutchen walked with the bases loaded and Garrett Jones grounded in Starling Marte.

”They just couldn’t get it done today,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said of his bullpen. ”Any time you lose a game in the last third, it can be extremely frustrating. When the starter gives you a great chance like that, you hate to see it slip away.”

The Pirates added their fifth run on a double by Martin and a sacrifice fly from Gaby Sanchez. Martin has a hit in 10 of his past 11 games.

Pittsburgh had scored just one run in the first 15 innings of the series before their four-run outburst. The beleaguered St. Louis Cardinals bullpen had its ERA balloon to 5.62. The Cardinals have given up 39 runs after the sixth inning this season.

”Honestly, I didn’t know they were struggling like that,” Martin said. ”All of those guys have tremendous arms and they’ve got good stuff. It’s going to even out for them, I’m sure.

”The difference is, when they’re struggling, it’s just their minds that are struggling. Maybe their focus is just a bit off. When you get a guy whose focus is off he tends to make more mistakes and that’s when you have to capitalize.”

Jason Grilli surrendered his first run of the season on an RBI double from Carlos Beltran in the ninth but earned his 10th save in 10 tries.

St. Louis jumped to a 2-0 lead with single runs in the first and sixth. Pete Kozma’s two-out single up the middle scored Jon Jay. Matt Carpenter and Beltran singled to start the first. Carpenter scored on Matt Holliday’s groundout.

Westbrook’s performance also lowered the Cardinals starters ERA to a league-best 2.08.

He allowed a runner to reach second base once, though the Pirates went in order just one time.

Westbrook has struggled throughout his career against the Pirates, entering with a 1-7 record and a 5.28 ERA. It could have been worse. He gave up four runs and six hits in two innings April 16 before rained forced the game’s postponement.

”I felt like I was throwing the ball pretty well, had a good sinker. I was able to get some early outs and stayed out of trouble for the most part.”

— Associated Press —

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