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Chiefs sign free agent linebacker Akeem Jordan

ChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Monday that the club has signed free agent linebacker Akeem Jordan.

Jordan (6-1, 230) has played in 82 games (34 starts) in six NFL seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles (2007-12). His career numbers include 184 tackles (151 solo), 1.0 sacks (-6.0 yards), two interceptions, seven passes defensed, two forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries. He has played in five postseason contests (three starts), including the 2009 NFC Championship Game.

The Harrisonburg, Va., native originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent in 2007. An all-state linebacker, he played collegiately at Division I-AA James Madison University. Jordan prepped at Harrisonburg High School.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Cardinals, Busch Stadium to host first-ever football game

CardsThe St. Louis Cardinals announced Monday that longtime football rivals Southeast Missouri State University and Southern Illinois University will play each other at Busch Stadium on Saturday, September 21st.  Kickoff is set for 1 PM.

“We are thrilled to host our first football game in Busch Stadium with two great schools that have such a large following in St. Louis,” said Bill DeWitt III, President of the Cardinals. “We are excited to showcase the versatility of Busch Stadium as a multi-use sports venue.”

This will be the 81st game between Southeast and SIU, who have close to 40,000 local alumni in St. Louis, as well as thousands of students from the St. Louis area.

“We’d like to thank the St. Louis Cardinals for the opportunity to play this game at Busch Stadium,” said Kenneth W. Dobbins, President of Southeast Missouri State University. “Nearly 40 percent of this year’s freshmen class at Southeast is from the greater St. Louis region, and playing this game at Busch Stadium is exciting for all our students, and great exposure for our University and the Redhawk football program.”

“Southern Illinois is definitely Cardinals’ country, so this is a great fit for our University and football program,” said Rita Cheng, Chancellor of Southern Illinois University. “It will be a great experience for our student-athletes and for our fans on both sides of the river.”

Ticket prices start at $10 and will go on sale June 3rd.  For tickets and additional details, fans should go to cardinals.com/football. Be sure to join the conversation with #footballatbusch

As the iconic home of one the most storied franchises in baseball, Busch Stadium is one of the most sought after special event venues in St. Louis.   Since it was opened in 2006, Busch Stadium has hosted over a thousand special events ranging from corporate meetings, weddings and charity events to one-of-kind concerts such as Dave Mathews Band, the Eagles and U2. This will be the first football game and the second major non-baseball sporting event held at Busch Stadium. The Cardinals will host an international soccer match between the English Premier League teams Chelsea and Manchester City in May.

— Cardinals Media Relations —

Gordon’s single completes Royals’ comeback against Toronto

RoyalsErvin Santana kept the Kansas City Royals in the game, wiggling out of every jam that the Toronto Blue Jays created. Alex Gordon made all the work pay off.

The hot-hitting Gordon drove home Chris Getz with a single in the ninth inning, and the Royals beat the Blue Jays 3-2 on Sunday to avoid a three-game sweep.

”Erv gave us a chance and we just persevered at the end,” said Gordon, who extended his hitting streak to 11 games with a pair of base hits. ”It felt good.”

Santana pitched eight sharp innings, and Kelvin Herrera (1-0) kept the Blue Jays off the board in the ninth. Toronto brought in Darren Oliver to face three straight left-handed hitters, even though left-handed bats have been 5 for 8 against the reliever this season.

Oliver (0-1) retired Jarrod Dyson to start the ninth, but Getz doubled to right to bring up Gordon, whose single allowed Getz to slide home easily in front of the tag.

”To get a win like that, a walkoff, it’s a nice boost of energy,” Getz said. ”You don’t want to get swept, so to scratch out a game like that is nice.”

Alcides Escobar and Lorenzo Cain also drove in runs for Kansas City.

Edwin Encarnacion homered and drove in both runs for the Blue Jays, who had won six straight and eight of 10 against the Royals at Kauffman Stadium. That included a four-game sweep in their only series in Kansas City last season.

”They’re scrappy. They battle you,” Blue Jays manager John Gibbons said. ”The thing that stands out is their defense. They take away hits. In tight ball games, that makes a difference.”

The Blue Jays struck in the first inning when Melky Cabrera and Jose Bautista delivered back-to-back base hits. Dyson bobbled Bautista’s routine single in center, and that sent Cabrera to third base. He scored moments later on Encarnacion’s groundout.

Dyson atoned for his miscue with a leadoff triple in the third inning. After Gordon extended his hitting streak a check-swing single that went about 15 feet, Escobar hit a deep sacrifice fly to right field that knotted the game 1-all.

Encarnacion, who’d been 5 for 44 on the season, gave Toronto the lead back in the sixth. He sent the first pitch of the inning skimming over the wall in left field for a homer.

”That’s huge,” Gibbons said. ”That’s a good sign for Eddie.”

Kansas City matched him in the bottom half, though, when Billy Butler sent a blooper to right field, reached second on a two-out single by Eric Hosmer, and then managed to chug home on Cain’s base hit to left field – the big DH looked as if he needed oxygen when he got back to the dugout.

The fact that the game was 2-all at that point was a testament to some nice defense.

And some fairly clutch pitching.

Toronto’s Brandon Morrow allowed just the two runs in six innings, at one point retiring eight straight batters. He struck out three and only issued an intentional watch.

”I didn’t have my best stuff,” he said, ”but I made a lot of good pitches and kept us in it.”

So did Santana, who put the leadoff runner aboard in the second and third innings but got some help from a pair of inning-ending double-plays. Santana also left two stranded in the fifth, thanks to a nice play by Dyson of tracking down Emilio Bonifacio’s fly ball in center field.

His greatest Houdini act may have come in the eighth, when Santana walked Encarnacion to put runners on first and second with two outs. He struck out J.P. Arencibia to escape the inning.

That gave Getz and Gordon the opportunity to win the game.

”I have confidence in my offense,” Santana said. ”We have a lot of young talent. I know they can get the job done.”

— Associated Press —

St. Louis loses series finale to Brewers in 10 innings

CardsAfter setting a team record for the most consecutive innings without scoring a run, the Milwaukee Brewers now have a new streak going – one they much prefer.

Jonathan Lucroy hit a solo homer in the 10th inning as the Brewers rallied past the St. Louis Cardinals 4-3 Sunday and avoided a sweep.

The Brewers had been shut out in 32 innings before Ryan Braun hit a two-run homer off reliever Trevor Rosenthal in the eighth that made it 3-2.

Milwaukee tied it with another run in the ninth and then won on Lucroy’s shot. Lucroy credited Braun with getting the Brewers on track.

”After he hit that homer, we had a little bit rolling,” Lucroy said. ”You could feel the tide turn a little bit. I think we were pressing a lot to score some runs. That was a big homer that opened it up for us. It let us relax and play a little better.”

Braun’s second home run of the season snapped a 39-inning shutout streak for St. Louis pitchers. The Brewers had not scored since the second inning Tuesday against the Cubs and had lost three in a row.

”It’s been a scuffle,” Milwaukee manager Ron Roenicke said. ”It’s been really difficult to get wins thus far. We did a nice job battling back in the eighth and the ninth. That’s always a positive.”

Milwaukee tied it in the ninth on a leadoff single by Carlos Gomez and an RBI double by Yuniesky Betancourt off Mitchell Boggs. The Cardinals’ closer-for-now left without retiring a batter and blew his second save in five chances.

”This was there for us to take,” Boggs said. ”The bottom line is I had a chance to get the win for us and I didn’t get the job done.”

After retiring Rickie Weeks on a fly to start the 10th, Fernando Salas (0-2) gave up Lucroy’s first home run of the season.

”Any time is a good time for a homer,” Lucroy said. ”I haven’t had a lot of success ofd that guy in the past. It was nice to hit a ball hard off him.”

Brandon Kintzler (1-0) pitched a scoreless ninth and got the first out in the 10th. Burke Badenhop retired pinch-hitter Carlo Beltran on a grounder for the final out and his first save.

Matt Adams had another big day in the loss for St. Louis, as he had a solo home run and a single in four at-bats. Adams has homered in three straight games and has a hit in all five games he has played.

Adams is batting .611 (11-for-18) with three homers and eight RBI.

Matt Holliday had an RBI single and Yadier Molina an RBI double for the other St. Louis runs.

The Cardinals broke through for the game’s first two runs against Marco Estrada with four consecutive two-out hits in the third, including an RBI single by Holliday and an RBI double to the gap by Molina. Allen Craig was thrown out at the plate trying to score on Molina’s hit.

Adams made it five straight hits when he led off the fourth with a 419-foot homer to center that made it 3-0.

— Associated Press —

Royals lose to Toronto despite Shields allowing just two hits

RoyalsAfter finding out Jose Reyes likely will be sidelined until the All-Star break, R.A. Dickey won his first game for the Toronto Blue Jays.

The NL Cy Young Award winner allowed one run and five hits in 6 1-3 innings Saturday night, and Jose Bautista backed him with a two-run homer in the Blue Jays’ 3-2 win over the Kansas City Royals.

James Shields (1-2) was a hard-luck loser for the Royals, pitching a two-hitter with six strikeouts and three walks.

Acquired from the New York Mets after going 20-6 last season, Dickey was 0-2 with an 8.44 ERA in his first two starts for Toronto. Against the Royals, the knuckleballer struck out four, walked two and hit a batter, throwing 64 of 100 pitches for strikes.

— Associated Press —

Wainwright, Cardinals dominate Milwaukee, 8-0

CardsAfter ups and downs last season after reconstructive elbow surgery, Adam Wainwright is reclaiming his role as the St. Louis Cardinals ace. His bat looks pretty good, too.

Wainwright pitched a four-hitter and drove in two runs with three hits, including a pair in a seven-run sixth inning, and Cardinals beat the Milwaukee Brewers 8-0 Saturday for their third straight shutout.

”He’s back to himself,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. ”He’s healthy, and that’s a great place to start. Seasons like last year teach you how to pitch more than just rely on great stuff.”

Milwaukee ace Yovani Gallardo (0-1) endured yet another setback against his nemesis, falling to 1-10 with a 6.83 ERA versus St. Louis. Gallardo allowed six runs – five earned – and seven hits in 5 1-3 innings.

A 16-game winner coming off his fourth consecutive 200-strikeout season, he was 0-2 with a 12.34 ERA in three starts against St. Louis last season. Including a loss in the 2011 NL division series, Gallardo sinks to 1-11 with a 6.86 ERA against the Cardinals.

”It’s just one of those things,” Gallardo said. ”I know I haven’t had very many good ones, but the few that I’ve hung in there I was able to keep it together and not let it get out of hand like it happened today.”

Cardinals pitchers have thrown 32 consecutive scoreless innings, and St. Louis is 4-1 going into Sunday’s homestand finale. Jake Westbrook shut out Cincinnati on Wednesday, and rookie Shelby Miller combined with two relievers on a two-hitter against Milwaukee on Friday.

Minus injured Chris Carpenter and departed Kyle Lohse, the Cardinals rotation was thought to be a potential weakness.

”I said it in the beginning of the season, this league doesn’t really know what kind of arms we have,” said Wainwright, who was 14-13 with a 3.94 ERA last year. ”We have some great arms. The world is seeing that.”

Milwaukee, missing injured sluggers Corey Hart and Aramis Ramirez, hasn’t scored in 25 straight innings and is 1-8 since winning on opening day.

”When things don’t go your way, it’s always just ‘Here we go again,”’ Rickie Weeks said. ”We are going to keep our heads up, that’s what we do around here.”

Wainwright (2-1) retired his first 10 batters and did not allow a ball out of the infield in that span. He matched his career best with 12 strikeouts in his fifth shutout and 12th complete game. He has yet to walk a batter in three starts over 22 innings.

When he was out in 2011, he noticed how much walks could hurt a pitcher.

”It’s something I say to myself before every game: No free passes,” Wainwright said. ”Even when I get behind in the count, you can throw good quality pitches in the zone and let guys get themselves out or get a hit. At least make them earn it.”

Wainwright singled twice with an RBI in the sixth, becoming the first Cardinals pitcher to get two hits in an inning since Braden Looper singled twice in the fifth against the Padres on Aug. 6, 2007. A career .202 hitter, Wainwright lined an RBI single over a drawn-in infield to put the Cardinals ahead in the third, then beat out an infield hit and added an RBI single off Burke Badenhop.

Wainwright’s 1.94 career ERA against the Brewers is the lowest among active pitchers, and four of his last five starts against them have been complete games.

Ryan Braun struck out three times for the second straight day, and Logan Schafer also fanned three times. Weeks struck out twice and doubled in the seventh, stopping an 0-for-21 slide.

Jon Jay also singled twice with an RBI in the sixth, and Matt Holliday had a two-run single. Jay contributed a nice diving catch in center to rob Martin Maldonado of a hit in the fifth, one at-bat before Yuniesky Betancourt doubled.

Gallardo allowed a run and three hits entering the sixth, when six of the first seven batters reached safely.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City loses series opener against Blue Jays

RoyalsJose Reyes heard a pop in his left ankle as he awkwardly slid into second base. After that, everything else was a blur to the Toronto Blue Jays on Friday night.

The trainers lifted their star shortstop onto a cart, and the cart drove through the bullpen gate in right field. The sight was of Reyes, his ankle heavily bandaged, being pushed out of their clubhouse after an 8-4 win over the Kansas City Royals, on his way to have an MRI exam.

The sound of general manager Alex Anthopoulos on the phone with other GMs, already trying to make a deal for a replacement amid the sobering news that Reyes could be out up to three months.

”It’s on everybody’s mind,” Blue Jays manager John Gibbons said. ”Doesn’t matter if he’s on our team or another team, in the baseball world – the baseball community – your heart goes out to whoever it might be. In this case, he’s one of the top guys in the game.”

Reyes had just driven in two runs with a base hit when he was attempting to steal second base in the sixth inning. He appeared to be indecisive about whether to go in sliding or standing, and made the late choice to hit the dirt, his trailing ankle twisting cruelly beneath him.

Reyes slid over the bag, and then rolled around on the dirt, screaming in pain. Trainers for both teams ran out to help him while a green cart was driven in from the outfield.

”It didn’t look good, obviously,” Blue Jays starter J.A. Happ said.

Anthopoulos said the results of the MRI exam may not be known until Saturday, and while the initial diagnosis was a sprained left ankle, the GM acknowledged Reyes is headed for the disabled list and that it could be months before he is back in the lineup.

”You never want to see it, but at the same time, you’ve been through enough to know it’s going to happen over the course of the season,” Anthopoulos said.

”If it’s good news, you’re looking at four weeks,” he said. ”The other scenario could be three months, or if something comes up we’re not expecting, it could be more than that.”

Happ (2-0), the only Blue Jays starter to win this season, gave up three runs on 41 pitches in the first inning. But he survived a couple shaky stretches to last four more frames, and Aaron Loup went the final three innings for his first career save.

Adam Lind and Emilio Bonifacio also drove in two runs each for the Blue Jays, who hammered the Royals’ Luis Mendoza (0-1) for eight runs – seven of them earned – in just 5 2-3 innings.

”He really struggled to get the feel of his breaking ball, struggled to keep it down in the zone,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”There were some times he was trying to bounce it and couldn’t do it. It was just one of those nights. He wasn’t near as sharp as he was in Philly.”

Lorenzo Cain drove in a pair of runs for Kansas City, which couldn’t overcome some shaky pitching and even shakier defense. The Royals committed three errors, matching their season total.

Toronto struck first for just the second time all season when J.P. Arencibia’s single to left and a double by Lind down the right-field line gave the Blue Jays a 2-0 lead.

The Royals answered back with three in the bottom half.

Salvador Perez’s single to right drove in the first run. Happ loaded the bases moments later, earning a visit from Blue Jays pitching coach Pete Walker, and then watched Cain smack the first pitch he saw to center field to give Kansas City a 3-2 lead.

Bonifacio pulled the Blue Jays back ahead in the second when he doubled off the wall in right to drive in a run. The speedster headed for third on the throw to the plate, and then scored when Perez threw the ball down the left-field line – the catcher’s second error of the game.

Lind delivered a sacrifice fly in the third to extend the Blue Jays’ lead, and Alcides Escobar matched him with a double in the fifth to pull Kansas City back within 5-4.

Bonifacio’s two-out double in the sixth gave Toronto its two-run cushion back. Luke Hochevar came in to relieve Mendoza, and Reyes followed with a two-run single to make the score 8-4.

That’s when the star shortstop attempted to steal second.

The momentum of his late slide carried him over the base, and his ankle twisted backward as second base umpire Marvin Hudson signaled safe. Reyes screamed in pain, and then pulled the front of his blue jersey over his face as trainers from both teams ran out onto the infield.

A hush fell over the crowd, and Blue Jays’ clubhouse was so quiet that it seemed as if they had lost the game rather than won when it opened shortly after the final out was made.

”Jose is great. He’s a big part of this team. I can’t emphasize that enough,” Anthopoulos said. ”Every team goes through these things. I don’t believe we’re a team built on one player, no matter how great a player it is. Just continue to move forward.”

— Associated Press —

Miller outduels Lohse as Cards blank Milwaukee

CardsRookie Shelby Miller allowed one hit in seven innings, a single by Norichika Aoki to open the game, and the St. Louis Cardinals had just enough to spoil Kyle Lohse’s first start as a visitor since 2007 in a 2-0 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers on Friday night.

A near-sellout crowd of 42,528 bundled up in 44-degree chill for the second Stan Musial tribute of the opening homestand, featuring a harmonica giveaway and the unveiling of a memorial plaque attached to the iconic Musial statue outside Busch Stadium. Seven members of the Musial family threw simultaneous first pitches and Musial’s No. 6 was cut into the outfield grass in center.

David Freese had an RBI single at the end of a three-hit flurry to open the second and Yadier Molina hit his second homer in the seventh for the Cardinals, who have allowed one run during a three-game winning streak.

Lohse, a 16-game winner whom the Cardinals did not attempt to re-sign, allowed two runs in seven innings while throwing 82 pitches – 31 fewer than Miller needed. He received a nice ovation before his first at-bat leading off the third, with hundreds of fans standing.

Miller (2-0) had a career-best eight strikeouts in his third career start, one more than he had in his debut against the Reds in the 2012 regular-season finale. He retired his final 17 in order after hitting Alex Gonzalez with one out in the second, and fanned Ryan Braun and Carlos Gomez twice each.

Lohse (0-1) pulled a nice escape in the second, holding the Cardinals to one run after giving up three straight hits in the second. He allowed one hit the next four innings before Molina homered with one out in the seventh.

Lohse, who is 30-18 with a 3.39 ERA at Busch Stadium, made his first start in St. Louis in an opposition uniform since a 5-1 win for the Reds on June 7, 2007.

Trevor Rosenthal retired the side in order in the eighth and Mitchell Boggs stranded two runners in the ninth, striking out Braun and Rickie Weeks to earn his second save in four chances to wind up a game played in 2 hours, 15 minutes.

Carlos Beltran led off the first with a broken-bat single that gave him a .575 average (23 for 40) against Lohse, and the Cardinals had runners on second and third after Braun, leaving his feet at the last second on a running attempt, couldn’t hang onto Molina’s double to the gap to left-center. Freese singled up the middle on the next pitch to put St. Louis ahead, but Lohse got eighth-place hitter Pete Kozma on a called third strike and Miller grounded into a double play.

— Associated Press —

Chiefs sign former K-State linebacker Zac Diles

ChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Friday that the club has signed free agent linebacker Zac Diles.

Diles (6-2, 245) has played in 67 games (31 starts) in six NFL seasons with the Tennessee Titans (2012), Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2011), Indianapolis Colts (2011) and Houston Texans (2007-10).His career numbers include 223 tackles (161 solo), 1.0 sacks (-9.0 yards), one interception, three passes defensed, three forced fumbles and one fumble recovery.

The Abilene, Texas, native was originally selected by the Houston Texans in the seventh round (218th overall) of the 2007 NFL Draft. He appeared in all 24 games in his two seasons at Kansas State and was a two-time All-Big 12 honoree. Diles began his collegiate career at Fresno City College, where he started 22 games over two seasons and led the team to a Valley Conference Title and a berth in the 2004 California North Division championship game as a sophomore. He prepped at Tulare High School in California’s central valley.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Butler, Francoeur homer as Royals complete sweep of Twins

RoyalsWade Davis pitched out of bases loaded jams in the first two innings, Billy Butler and Jeff Francoeur homered and the Kansas City Royals beat the Minnesota Twins 3-0 on Wednesday night to sweep the three-game series.

The Royals have won four straight and six of seven to move three-games above .500 for the first time since May 12, 2011, when they were 20-17.

Butler homered in the first, while Francoeur led off the seventh with a home run to extend his hitting streak to seven games.

The Royals got another run in the seventh when Alcides Escobar’s single scored Chris Getz. Salvador Perez had three of the nine Kansas City hits.

It was 45 degrees for the first pitch, but the wind chill was 33 with most of the game played in a rain.

Davis (1-0), acquired from Tampa Bay in a December trade, held the Twins to four singles in five scoreless innings, striking out six, walking three and hitting a batter.

Twins right-hander Liam Hendriks (0-1), who is 1-11 in 22 career starts, took the loss, although he gave up just one run – Butler’s homer – on four hits in five innings.

Davis, who threw 52 pitches in the first two innings, struck out Aaron Hicks and Joe Mauer to start the game, before walking two and yielding a bloop single to Justin Morneau. Trevor Plouffe flied out to end the inning.

Davis faced a bigger predicament in the second when the Twins loaded the bases with none out. He rebounded by striking out Hicks and Mauer and retiring Josh Willingham on an infield popup.

Bruce Chen replaced Davis and worked three innings, giving up two hits, while Kelvin Herrera completed the shutout with three strikeouts to pick up his second save in as many opportunities.

The Twins stranded 12 runners and went 0-for-11 with runners in scoring position.

— Associated Press —

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