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Royals complete three-game sweep of Tampa Bay

On the hottest day this year in Kansas City, dehydration was starting to become a concern. Players were exhausted. Royals manager Ned Yost was starting to feel sorry for Tony Randazzo behind the plate, and he wasn’t even the umpire whose face had been bloodied in the game.

Billy Butler’s tiebreaking home run in the eighth was an especially welcome sight, leading the Royals to a 5-4 victory and three-game sweep of the Tampa Bay Rays.

”It was really, really hot out there,” said Butler, who greeted reliever Burke Badenhop with his 15th home run. ”It was over 100 degrees. Guys were starting to get dehydrated. It was not a good day to go extra innings.”

Yost said trainers had IVs waiting in the locker room.

”We were going to start losing guys,” Yost said. ”We had some guys who were starting to cramp. Eric Hosmer’s elbow was starting to get a little stiff. The umpire was about ready to fall out behind home plate. The heat out there was pretty oppressive. When Billy hit that ball, I was just hoping it was high enough.”

Aaron Crow (1-1), the fifth Royals pitcher, was the winner after getting two outs in the eighth as the Royals recorded their first home sweep of the Rays in 11 years.

”It’s been hot the last few days,” said Rays manager Joe Maddon. ”But I tell you what, you didn’t hear one guy complain. They played right down to the last out. They were great.”

Mike Moustakas and Alcides Escobar also homered for the Royals, who managed to sweep a team three games immediately after getting swept themselves. After a potentially ruinous 12-game losing streak in April, the youthful Royals have fought back to five games under .500 (34-39).

”It would be nice if we made things easier for ourselves once in a while,” said Jeff Francoeur. ”This is the third time now we’ve fought back to get to five games under .500, but then we just take a few steps back. Our goal was to get back to .500 by the All-Star break.”

The Rays had tied it 4-4 in the top of the eighth after Carlos Pena reached leading off on an error that left first base umpire Brian Gorman wiping off blood. Pena’s hot grounder glanced off first baseman Hosmer’s glove and struck Gorman on the left side of the face as he was signaling the ball fair.

The veteran ump cleaned some blood off his face but stayed in the game after being attended to by the Royals’ trainer. Then Tim Collins walked Jeff Keppinger and Ben Zobrist unloaded a two-run triple.

”He had a little cut,” said Yost. ”But he’s fine. Gorman’s fine.”

Zobrist was 3 for 4 with three RBIs but made three outs on the bases. He was thrown out twice at home plate trying to score from third on ground balls.

”It’s a tough way to end the road trip,” said Zobrist. ”They (Royals) were playing great over there. They did everything. They hit the ball really well, they pitched well, and played good defense. We couldn’t get anything going.”

Jonathan Broxton pitched the ninth for his 19th save in 22 opportunities.

Badenhop (1-2) recorded only one out after starter Matt Moore labored through 7 1-3 innings, giving up 10 hits and four runs.

Moustakas, who had two home runs on Sunday, hit the first pitch he saw from Moore in the first inning for his 13th home run. Escobar, who has seven multihit games in his last 12, was 3 for 3 with a double, a single and a solo homer that made it 2-0 in the third.

Yuniesky Betancourt had a two-run single in the fifth as the Royals completed a 3-3 homestand after getting swept by St. Louis.

Just hours after being recalled from Triple-A Omaha, Everett Teaford was charged with two runs on four hits in 5 innings. The left-hander was relieved by Kelvin Herrera with runners at first and second in the sixth and the Rays made it 4-2 on RBI singles from Keppinger and Zobrist before Zobrist ended the inning attempting to steal second.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis loses series finale at Miami

It took a few minutes, but the umpires’ verdict was worth the wait for the Miami Marlins.

John Buck and pinch hitter Logan Morrison connected for consecutive home runs in the seventh inning, rallying the Marlins past St. Louis 5-3 Wednesday night and ending their eight-game losing streak against the Cardinals.

Buck tied it with one out when he homered off Fernando Salas. Morrison then sent a drive off Sam Freeman (0-1) that hit the top of the right-field fence, bounced off a nearby railing and dropped back into play.

”I thought it hit the back of the concrete and went out, I didn’t even know it came back onto the field,” Morrison said.

After being stopped at second base while the umpires reviewed the play, Morrison was allowed to finish his home-run trot. It was Morrison’s first career pinch-hit home run.

”Thank God we had instant replay because if not that would have been double,” Marlins manager Ozzie Guillen said. ”It also helps the umpires. I don’t think it killed anybody in baseball for that idea. It helped the game.”

The Cardinals had won five in a row overall. Miami won for just the second time in 10 games.

”Any time you beat the Cardinals, it’s a good win especially when they’re playing that well,” Buck said. ”Hopefully it can be momentum we can build on and start our own little stretch here.”

Tony Cruz’s first career homer in the top of the seventh put the Cardinals ahead 3-2.

”I was just looking for a good pitch to hit and I got it,” Cruz said. ”Thankfully, it went out. It’s a great feeling. I had a lot of family here tonight. They knew I was playing. I thank Mike (manager Matheny) for giving me the opportunity of letting me play in front of my family. Unfortunately, we didn’t get the win, though.”

Buck has seven home runs this season, including three in his last six games. This was the second time the Marlins have hit back-to-back home runs this season – Justin Ruggiano and Morrison accomplished the feat on June 1 at Philadelphia.

”Any time Buck is at the plate we know he has a chance to hit the ball out of the ballpark,” Guillen said. ”We need that from him.”

Omar Infante’s RBI double in the eighth gave the Marlins an insurance run.

Anibal Sanchez (4-6) ended his three-game losing streak, allowing three runs in seven innings.

”We have a great team so if we keep playing like that we can start winning a lot of games,” Sanchez said.

Steve Cishek pitched the eighth and Heath Bell recorded his 15th save in 19 chances by pitching the ninth. He got Allen Craig to pop up with Matt Carpenter on second to end the game.

”Five consecutive wins is always a positive,” Matheny said. ”Guys are always going to remember that. That was a good run.”

The Cardinals took a 2-0 lead on a sacrifice fly by Carlos Beltran and an RBI double by David Freese.

The Marlins tied it at 2 in the fifth against Joe Kelly on an RBI single by Buck and a groundout by Jose Reyes.

— Associated Press —

Royals pound Rays for second straight win

Bruce Chen went seven innings in another workmanlike start, Jeff Francoeur and Yuniesky Betancourt both went deep and the Kansas City Royals beat the Tampa Bay Rays 8-2 on Tuesday night.

Betancourt hit a two-run shot during a four-run third inning against Chris Archer (0-2), and Francoeur added a three-run homer during a four-run eighth to give Kansas City some breathing room.

Alex Gordon and Billy Butler also drove in runs to pace a Royals offense that was outscored by St. Louis 30-14 over the weekend, but has trumped Tampa Bay 16-2 so far this series.

The Royals will go for the sweep on Wednesday afternoon.

Chen (7-6) gave up a run in the first and Brooks Conrad’s solo shot in the second to win for the seventh time in his last nine decisions.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals defeat Miami for fifth straight win

Yadier Molina hit a three-run homer and Kyle Lohse pitched into the eighth inning to lead the St. Louis Cardinals past the staggering Miami Marlins 5-2 on Tuesday night for their fifth straight victory.

One night after Molina’s tying homer in the ninth inning keyed a huge comeback, St. Louis scored five unearned runs in the first.

The Marlins have lost eight of nine and are 3-17 in their last 20 games. Miami manager Ozzie Guillen was ejected for arguing balls and strikes with plate umpire Dan Bellino.

Lohse (7-2) allowed two runs and four hits while striking out four to lower his ERA to 2.82. Jason Motte pitched the ninth for his 16th save in 20 chances.

The Cardinals jumped out to a big early lead, aided by errors from Marlins starter Carlos Zambrano (4-6) and shortstop Jose Reyes. Molina took advantage of the miscues with his 12th homer. Carlos Beltran had an RBI single.

Molina has homered in three straight games and is two shy of tying his career best set last season. His two-run shot with two outs in the ninth Monday night off Miami closer Heath Bell capped a four-run inning, and St. Louis went on to win 8-7 in 10 innings.

Giancarlo Stanton’s 17th home run and Greg Dobbs’ sacrifice fly pulled the Marlins to 5-2 on Tuesday.

Miami threatened in the sixth after Reyes and Hanley Ramirez reached, but Lohse got out of the jam when shortstop Rafael Furcal snagged a hard-hit grounder by Logan Morrison and turned a double play.

Guillen was tossed in the seventh. Following a walk issued by Zambrano to Allen Craig that loaded the bases, Guillen came out of the dugout to lift Zambrano. Guillen walked by Bellino to voice his displeasure with a call and was ejected. It was Guillen’s first ejection as the Marlins’ manager.

Zambrano pitched 6 2-3 innings, allowing five unearned runs and seven hits. He struck out five and walked five while throwing 73 of 125 pitches for strikes.

— Associated Press —

Hochevar stars in Royals’ 8-0 win against Tampa Bay

Luke Hochevar was taken aback when he walked into the manager’s office one day and manager Ned Yost and the Royals coaches started trying to convince him to make a change.

Simplify your approach, they said. Use your three core pitches.

It took a while for Hochevar to buy in.

Now the change is paying off.

The mercurial right-hander struck out eight in his second career shutout, and the Kansas City offense made sure to come through in an 8-0 rout of the Tampa Bay Rays on Monday night.

”I guess I have to come up with a better word than fantastic, tremendous and great. He was phenomenal,” Yost said. ”The results have been dramatically improved since he got back to his three core pitches. He’s starting to show exactly what he can do.”

His arsenal pared down to primarily a four-seam fastball, curveball and change-up, Hochevar (5-7) mowed through a weak-hitting Tampa Bay lineup for his first shutout since Sept. 18, 2009.

Now, the pitcher who was allowing nearly a run per inning earlier in the year has gone 16 2-3 scoreless innings, and is starting to resembled a former No. 1 overall draft pick.

”That was a great outing by Hoch,” said Eric Hosmer, who tacked on a homer in the eighth inning to finish off the scoring. ”He was in the zone, he was pounding pitches. He was great.”

Alcides Escobar and Alex Gordon both had three hits for the Royals, who were coming off an embarrassing sweep at the hands of St. Louis in which they were outscored 30-14 and burned through their bullpen – which made the start by Hochevar all the more impressive.

No Royals starter had even gone eight innings so far this season.

”If you don’t get him early and permit him to settle in, he gets better,” Rays manager Joe Maddon said. ”He was all over us tonight”

Alex Cobb (3-4) also managed to throw a complete game, the first of his career, though it wasn’t nearly as impressive: He allowed 13 hits while falling to 1-4 in his last five starts.

”In the first few innings, I just felt uncomfortable out there,” he said. ”Everything they were hitting was dropping. Unfortunately, they were falling everywhere.”

The banged-up Rays came into the game riding plenty of momentum after a double-header sweep of Philadelphia, while the Royals limped in after their rough series against the Cardinals.

Somebody must have flipped the script.

It was Kansas City that came out swinging from the start, with Gordon’s leadoff double setting up an RBI double by Mike Moustakas when the ball bounced off right fielder Ben Zobrist’s glove and over his head after he appeared to briefly lose it in the setting sun.

Cobb worked through a perfect second inning before coming unglued in the third.

It started with Escobar’s bunt single and a base hit by Gordon, and included a wild pitch that plate umpire Todd Tichenor accidentally kicked away from catcher Jose Molina, allowing both of the runners to advance. Betancourt followed with a two-run single.

Billy Butler came to the plate with one out and added a single, and Jeff Francoeur followed with an RBI single in which Butler was thrown out trying to reach third. Hosmer contributed an RBI single, and Salvador Perez added another run-scoring single, though he was cut down to end the inning after making a wide turn around first.

The inning ended after five runs on seven singles in a span of only eight batters.

The Royals added another run on Betancourt’s sacrifice fly in the fourth inning, and Hosmer went deep in the eighth, though both runs were moot the way Hochevar was dealing.

He got some help from double plays in the first and seventh innings, but otherwise took care of things himself. He worked a perfect second and sixth, and came back from consecutive base hits to start the fifth with three consecutive strikeouts.

It was the first time he had gone eight innings since last Sept. 3 against Cleveland.

This time, Hochevar managed to finish things off.

”I don’t think you ever have it figured out, because hitters adjust, the game is always changing,” he said. ”I know what I’m focusing on now, though, and that’s going to be consistent.”

— Associated Press —

Cardinals rally past Marlins and win in 10 innings

Rafael Furcal and pinch-hitting pitcher Joe Kelly drove in runs in the 10th inning and the St. Louis Cardinals, who scored four runs in the top of the ninth, held on to beat the Miami Marlins 8-7 on Monday night for their fourth straight victory.

Yadier Molina hit a two-run homer off Heath Bell in the ninth to cap the four-run inning and tie the game at 6.

In the bottom of the 10th, John Buck hit an RBI single off Jason Motte to bring the Marlins within 8-7. Motte got Jose Reyes to fly out with two on and two outs for his 15th save in 19 chances.

Victor Marte (2-1) pitched 2-3 innings for the win.

After halting a six-game losing streak with a win on Sunday, the Marlins have lost 16 of 19.

Tyler Greene singled with one out off Chad Gaudin (1-1) in the 10th before Furcal’s RBI double to left. With the bases loaded, Kelly who was batting for Marte, beat out an infield single for an 8-6 lead.

The Marlins led 6-1 in the eighth before Hanley Ramirez’s two errors on a ground ball by David Freese allowed the Cardinals to cut the deficit to 6-2.

Bell came on to pitch the ninth and allowed an RBI single to Carlos Beltran and a sacrifice fly to Allen Craig to pull St. Louis within 6-4. With one on and two outs, Molina blasted a 2-0 pitch over the fence in left to tie the game. It was Molina’s 11th home run of the season and second in as many days.

The bottom of the ninth was highlighted with lineup controversy.

After Ramirez singled with one out, Marlins manager Ozzie Guillen came out of the dugout to dispute the Cardinals’ lineup. Following a 10-minute discussion among the umpires, they ruled in Guillen’s favor leaving Cardinals manager Mike Matheny in disagreement and prompting Tony Cruz to come off the bench to replace Craig at first base.

Matheny thought the pitcher’s place in the order was the seventh spot whereas Guillen believed it was the fifth, which ended up being where Kelly delivered his pinch hit.

Reyes drove in runs with a double in the third and a single in the fifth.

The Cardinals pulled within 2-1 as Freese scored on a passed ball.

Miami starter Ricky Nolasco went 6 2-3 innings allowing one unearned run and striking out four.

Miami added to their lead in the seventh on consecutive bases-loaded walks issued by Eduardo Sanchez. Logan Morrison’s groundout and Greg Dobbs’ RBI single pushed the lead to 6-1 as the Marlins batted around scoring four runs on two hits and four walks.

Cardinals starter Jake Westbrook allowed two runs in six innings.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals win Sunday to finish off sweep of Kansas City

During an enjoyable three-game visit to Kansas City, patience was more than just a virtue for the St. Louis Cardinals.

Patience was also key in producing 41 hits, 30 runs and a three-game sweep of the shell-shocked Royals, who had won two out of three the previous weekend in St. Louis.

“Guys aren’t chasing many pitches out of the (strike) zone,” said manager Mike Matheny. “That’s kind of what’s going on here.”

In heaping three days of abuse upon KC pitchers, the heavy-hitting Cardinals rapped out 17 hits and 11 runs on Friday and 16 hits and eight runs on Saturday before completing their first sweep in Kansas City since 2009 with an 11-8 victory on Sunday.

The plate-patient Cardinals hitters drew nine walks on Sunday, six from starter Jonathan Sanchez and three from loser Tim Collins.

“When you set in to play these games, you want the opposition to beat you,” said Royals manager Ned Yost. “When you are walking guys and making errors, you are actually beating yourself.”

Carlos Beltran had a three-run home run and Matt Holliday and Allen Craig each drove in two runs for the Cardinals, who had scored just eleven runs their three previous games.

“We know we’re a good offensive team that’s going to be able to score runs. It’s good to see guys getting healthy and swinging the bat a lot better,” said Beltran.

Beltran gave the Cardinals an early lead in the first, lining Sanchez’s 0-2 pitch 389 feet over the fence for his 20th home run after Craig doubled and Holliday walked.

Beltran is tied with Milwaukee’s Ryan Braun for the NL lead. The three RBIs boosted his total to 56, one more than league-leader Andre Ethier had prior to the Dodgers’ game at the Angels. For the three-game series between the state rivals, Beltran had five hits and eight RBIs.

He’s also one homer shy of 200 in the National League. He has 322 overall.

“I don’t really focus on numbers,” he said. “I do look at my numbers at the end of the year and decide what type of year I have. Right now, we have a lot of baseball to play. I just need to focus and help this team win as many ballgames as we can.”

Mike Moustakas had two home runs for the Royals while Jeff Francoeur had one.

Moustakas, the second overall pick in the 2007 draft, hit a two-run, 442-foot shot off Lance Lynn in the first inning and led off the fourth with a 387-foot shot for his first multihomer game. He also had a single and three RBIs.

“I just got some good pitches to hit today and I didn’t miss them,” Moustakas said.

Lynn agreed.

“I made mistakes and both the guys who hit them are good hitters,” he said. “Moustakas is a great young power hitter and I threw him two fastballs over the plate and he hit them. Then I hung a breaking ball to Francoeur. You’ve got to make better pitches to those guys.”

In the second, Holiday hit an RBI double that that also put Craig on third, allowing him to make it 5-2 when Sanchez uncorked a wild pitch.

With the Cardinals leading 7-6 in the eighth, Collins (4-2) intentionally walked Rafael Furcal, loading the bases with one out. Craig then lined a two-run single into center and Daniel Descalo went from first to third when Jarrod Dyson bobbled the ball for an error. Holliday’s sacrifice fly made it 11-6. Collins went 1 2/3 innings and was charged with five runs, four earned, on three hits and three walks.

Victor Marte (1-1) got two outs in the sixth and faced one batter in the seventh for the win.

Cardinals starter Lynn, bidding to move into a tie for the NL lead with his 11th victory, went 5 1/3 innings and gave up nine hits and six runs, including three home runs. He had allowed only five home runs total before Sunday.

Moments after Francoeur’s solo homer in the fourth made it 5-4, Brayan an Pena hit a line shot right off the back of the 6-foot-5 right-hander for a single. Lynn continued after tossing a few test pitches, and one out later gave up Dyson’s RBI triple that tied it 5-all.

“I’m fine,” said Lynn. “It just grazed my back.”

Yadier Molina’s home run made it 6-5 in the sixth. In the seventh, Holliday walked, stole second and made it 7-6 on David Freeze’s RBI single. Billy Butler had a two-run home run for KC in the ninth.

Sanchez gave up only four hits in 5 2/3 innings but walked six, allowed two home runs and threw a wild pitch while allowing six runs.

— Associated Press —

Holliday, Wainright help Cardinals hammer Kansas City

Cardinals manager Mike Matheny is under no illusions that his team will be able to put up the kind of offense it has the first two games of its three-game series against Kansas City all the time.

Might as well take advantage of it while it’s happening, though.

Matt Holliday had four hits and drove in a pair of runs, Allen Craig belted a two-run homer and finished with three RBIs, and Adam Wainwright enjoyed all that run support while shutting down the Kansas City Royals in an 8-2 victory on Saturday.

”That’s the way it’s mean to be,” Matheny said. ”We know this isn’t the kind of offense you produce every night, but it gives you a lot of confidence.”

The Cardinals came into the series scuffling on offense, but they’ve broken out of it in style while taking the first two games. They matched a season high with 17 hits on Friday night en route to an 11-4 victory, and were nearly as proficient at the plate during the Saturday matinee.

All to the delight of a crowd of 37,240 that was primarily dressed in red.

”When you have a lineup like we have, just keep us in the game,” said Wainwright (6-7), who allowed two runs on four hits and two walks over seven sharp innings.

”That was a pretty dominant outing,” Matheny said. ”You can tell he’s in a good place.”

The Cardinals certainly feel like they’re in a good place in Kansas City, where they improved to 26-15 in franchise history, and took a 3-2 lead in the season series.

”Everyone’s working their tail off,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. ”They’re doing what they need to do in terms of their work and preparation. They just need to take it to the field.”

St. Louis started its offensive onslaught in the third inning against Luis Mendoza (2-4), when Rafael Furcal worked a two-out walk and back-to-back singles by Jon Jay and Holliday made it 1-0.

Mendoza eventually escaped the jam, but everything fell apart in the fifth.

Daniel Descalso started a run of five straight singles in the fifth for St. Louis, and RBI base hits by Jay and Holliday knocked Mendoza from the game. Kelvin Herrera came in and promptly gave up another RBI single to Carlos Beltran, staking the Cardinals to a 4-0 lead.

Furcal added another run with a single in the sixth, and even though Kansas City got two back in the bottom half on Alex Gordon’s run-scoring triple and Yuniesky Betancourt’s RBI groundout, St. Louis wasted little time in matching them with two more runs in the seventh inning.

That’s when Holliday doubled off reliever Greg Holland, and Craig belted a full-count pitch over the bullpen in left field for his ninth homer of the season.

”They were pitching me tough, a lot of sliders and fastballs off the plate,” Craig said. ”I just tried to put the barrel of the bat on it, and when you do that good things happen.”

All the offense sure took the pressure off Wainwright.

The former 20-game winner spent most of the afternoon looking like the guy who finished second in the 2010 Cy Young voting – before he needed season-ending Tommy John surgery last February.

Wainwright erased Gordon’s bunt single in the first by inducing a double play, and then set Kansas City down in order the next two innings. He didn’t allow a runner to reach second base until giving up two runs in the sixth, but he bounced back to work a scoreless seventh inning.

”I didn’t really have great stuff, I just tried to mix and keep them off balance,” Wainwright said. ”I knew if I kept making pitches, I had a big lead.”

— Associated Press —

Beltran powers Cards past Royals in return to Kansas City

Carlos Beltran spent time chatting with some old friends Friday night and reminiscing about his days playing for the Kansas City Royals.

Then he made everyone at Kauffman Stadium remember what he looked like as a youngster.

Beltran hit two-run doubles his first two times at the plate, leading a St. Louis Cardinals offense that matched a season high with 17 hits to an 11-4 victory over their I-70 rivals.

”You know what? It was good to be back,” said Beltran, who was playing in Kansas City for the first time since the Royals traded him in 2004. ”But it was better to put a good couple of swings together and get some runs.”

David Freese and Tyler Greene added two RBIs each for St. Louis, and everybody in the starting lineup had a hit before the fourth inning ended. Jon Jay returned from the disabled list to go 1 for 5 and score twice, and Matt Carpenter came off the DL to go 2 for 4 with an RBI.

It was plenty of offense for Joe Kelly (1-0), who gave up three runs over six shaky innings to pick up his first major league victory in his third career start.

”It feels pretty awesome,” Kelly said. ”I didn’t have my best stuff, but my teammates were awesome tonight. Good defense, and they really hit the ball.”

Most of the Cardinals’ offense came against Vin Mazzaro (3-2), who allowed seven runs, six hits, two walks and a hit batter while recording just four outs.

Mazzaro went six scoreless innings in a 3-2 win last Friday night at St. Louis.

”It was a tough one,” he said. ”Things didn’t go my way. I didn’t get down in the zone.”

Just about the only bright spot for Kansas City in the opener of a three-game series was the return of catcher Salvador Perez, who had been on the disabled list since spring training with a torn knee ligament. Perez went 2 for 4 with a monster two-run homer in the fourth inning.

Otherwise, a day that started off badly for the Royals – right-hander Felipe Paulino went on the DL with a torn elbow ligament – kept getting worse with every pitch Mazzaro threw.

His first three were balls to Rafael Furcal, and he eventually issued a walk. Jay was hit by a pitch, and Matt Holiday singled to load the bases for Beltran, whose two-run double off the wall in left field elicited a roar from a sellout crowd that included plenty of red shirts.

Yadier Molina added an RBI single, and Carpenter’s sacrifice fly made it 4-0.

Mazzaro managed to escape the inning, and Kansas City got a run back on three straight base hits, with Eric Hosmer’s slicing single to left bringing home Yuniesky Betancourt.

Mazzaro gave the run right back – and then some.

Furcal and Jay started the second with singles, and after Holliday flied out to left, Beltran delivered his second straight two-run double. Mazzaro was lifted from the game to a chorus of boos, and reliever Roman Colon didn’t fare much better as St. Louis took a 10-1 lead.

”We needed to get our offense off to a good start and get rolling,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said, ”but that’s not the kind of offense you’re going to get every time.”

It was the first time the Cardinals scored 10 or more runs in the first two innings since May 8, 2005, against San Diego, and their 17 hits in the game matched a season high.

Beltran was responsible for much of it in his return to Kansas City.

The six-time All-Star was drafted by the Royals in 1995, and drove in 100 or more runs four times over six-plus seasons. But the Royals traded him to Houston in June 2004, anticipating that they wouldn’t be able to pay Beltran the princely sum that he would get on the open market.

He eventually signed a seven-year, $119 million contract with the Mets.

Beltran landed with the Cardinals this season after a short stop in San Francisco, and faced the Royals for the first time last week in St. Louis, going 6 for 14 and driving in a run.

Beltran picked up right where he left off on Friday night.

This time, the rest of the Cardinals’ offense joined in the fun.

”It’s a good feeling any time you can contribute,” Beltran said. ”This place brings a lot of good memories. Kansas City was my home for six years and a half, and I got to meet some good people. I have a lot of good memories from here.”

— Associated Press —

Royals’ Paulino diagnosed with torn elbow ligament; Perez reinstated

The Kansas City Royals today announced that right-handed pitcher Felipe Paulino has been diagnosed by team doctors with a torn ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow.

The 28-year-old Paulino will travel shortly to receive a second opinion from Dr. Lewis Yocum.  Paulino made a rehab start with Class AA Northwest Arkansas on Wednesday, pitching three innings.  The right-hander was 3-1 with Kansas City this season in seven starts with a 1.67 ERA.

The Royals also announced the club has returned catcher Salvador Perez from his minor league rehab assignment and reinstated him from the 60-day Disabled List.  Perez will be in Kansas City and available for Friday’s game vs. St. Louis.

In order to officially add Perez to the active roster, the Royals will make a corresponding 25-man and 40-man roster move later today.

Perez, 22, has missed the entire 2012 season thus far after undergoing surgery on a torn meniscus in his left knee in March.  While on his rehab assignment with Omaha (AAA), he batted .340 (17-for-50) in 12 games with 11 runs scored, two doubles and seven RBI.

— Royals Media Relations —

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