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Cardinals sign left-hander J.C. Romero

The St. Louis Cardinals announced today that they have signed left-handed relief pitcher J.C. Romero to a one-year contract for the upcoming 2012 season.  The 35-year-old free-agent has 11-plus years of service in the majors with five Major League clubs.

“Romero is a proven lefty specialist, who has been a valuable bullpen piece for winning teams throughout his career” said Cardinals’ Senior Vice President John Mozeliak.  “We felt that it was important to maintain versatility and depth within our bullpen and we feel that J.C will be a solid addition.”

During his big-league career, Romero has compiled a 34-28 won-loss mark with seven saves in 664 games and a 4.07 ERA.  He leads Major League lefthanders in games pitched from 2002-2011 with 633, while his 517.0 innings pitched during that time span ranks 2nd among lefty relievers.  His .208 opp. BA (177-for-852) against left-handed batters is the lowest among all Major League lefties (min. 800 AB’s) since 2002, as are his 11 home runs allowed.

Two of Romero’s top seasons came in 2007 and 2008.  With Boston and Philadelphia in 2007 he pitched a combined 74 games, allowing just 12 ER over 56.1 IP (1.92 ERA).  In 2008 he pitched in a career high 81 games for the World Champion Phillies and surrendered just 18 runs over 59.0 IP for a 2.75 ERA.

Romero has made six career postseason appearances, three with the Minnesota Twins and three with Philadelphia, and he pitched for Puerto Rico in both the 2006 and 2009 World Baseball Classics.

Romero ended the 2011 season with Colorado after beginning the year with Philadelphia.  He also saw action in the Washington Nationals and New York Yankees minor league systems last season.

— Cardinals Media Relations —

Royals grant release of Minor League pitcher Santiago

The Kansas City Royals announced today that club has granted the release of minor league right-handed pitcher Mario Santiago in order for Santiago to sign a contract with the SK Wyverns of the Korean Baseball Organization (KBO).

The soon-to-be 27-year-old Santiago pitched with both Omaha (AAA) and Northwest Arkansas (AA) in 2011.  The 6-foot-1, 213-pounder recorded a combined record of 8-4 with a 3.70 ERA in 35 games (11 starts) last season.  The Royals selected the resident of Salinas, Puerto Rico, in the 16th round of the 2005 Draft.

— Royals Media Relations —

Cardinals sign shortstop Rafael Furcal

The St. Louis Cardinals announced today that they have agreed to terms with free-agent shortstop Rafael Furcal on a two-year deal for 2012 and 2013.  Furcal was acquired by the Cardinals on July 31 in a trade with the Los Angeles Dodgers and helped key the Cardinals 2011 World Championship run.

“Rafael proved to be a great addition for us last season,” said Cardinals’ Senior Vice President/General Manager John Mozeliak.  “His leadership and experience was very evident during the pennant race and into the postseason,”

After joining the Cardinals at the trade deadline last season, Furcal turned an N.L.-high 36 double plays among shortstops and he was ranked 2nd in both total chances (238) and assists (155).  He batted .255 with 7 HR’s and 16 RBI for the Cardinals, hitting safely in 38 of his 50 games.

The switch-hitting Furcal owns a career batting mark of .282 with 108 home runs and 302 stolen bases.

Furcal, 34, is a veteran of 12-plus seasons with the Atlanta Braves, Los Angeles Dodgers and Cardinals.  He was named to the National League All-Star team in 2010 when he batted .300 for the 3rd time in five seasons with the Dodgers.   The Dominican native was also named an N.L. All-Star in 2003 as member of the Braves.

Furcal has been considered to be one of the games’ top leadoff batters since breaking in with Atlanta in 2000 as the National League’s Rookie of the Year.  He has hit 29 career leadoff homers and ranks 2nd among the Dodgers’ all-time leaders in leadoff homers with 14.  Furcal owned the majors’ best on-base pct. (.370) among leadoff hitters in 2010.

Furcal has been to the postseason nine times in his career (five times with the Braves, three times with the Dodgers and once with St. Louis).

— Cardinals Media Relations —

Chiefs Fire Todd Haley

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – The Kansas City Chiefs have fired coach Todd Haley less than a year after he led the team to the AFC West division title.

The injury-ravaged Chiefs dropped to 5-8 after Sunday’s 37-10 loss the New York Jets.

Chiefs Chairman and CEO Clark Hunt said Monday the move is “best for the future of the Chiefs,” who lost several of their stars to season-ending injuries, including quarterback Matt Cassel and running back Jammal Charles.

Haley leaves with a 19-27 record in nearly three years at his first NFL head coaching job. The Chiefs won the AFC West last season with a 10-6 record.

The Chiefs are planning a news conference later Monday.

 

Chiefs get blown out by Jets

Mark Sanchez jogged onto the field for the first play of the game and immediately had to call an embarrassing timeout.

It was just about the only thing that stopped the New York Jets all afternoon.

Sanchez became the first Jets quarterback to throw two touchdown passes and run for two more scores as New York got off to a fast start and improved its positioning in the AFC playoff race by cruising to a 37-10 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday.

“I was happy we had another opening-drive touchdown,” Sanchez said. “It set the tone early, and we converted on some big third downs and didn’t get too many third downs, which was good. We had some explosive plays and the run game really took off.”

The Jets, plagued by slow starts all season, opened with a timeout — and boos from the MetLife Stadium crowd — because they had the wrong personnel on the field, but rebounded to score 28 points in the first half and were helped by an inept Chiefs offense that managed just 4 total yards in the first two quarters.

New York (8-5) also leapfrogged Cincinnati, Tennessee and Oakland, all 7-6 after losses Sunday, and took over the last wild-card spot in the AFC.

“It’s just what we’ve been talking about for the last 12, 13 weeks,” linebacker Calvin Pace said. “It all came to form today, which is what we needed. We kind of hold our own destiny in our hands and it was about getting a good win.”

Sanchez was 13 of 21 for 181 yards before being pulled for Mark Brunell with the game in hand, and was cheered warmly in pregame introductions after being booed in the team’s last home game two weeks ago.

Shonn Greene had a season-high 129 yards rushing and a score along with three catches for 58 yards, and Santonio Holmes and LaDainian Tomlinson each caught touchdown passes for the Jets (8-5), who have won three straight and improved to 6-1 at home.

“I guess it would be our best game so far this year,” coach Rex Ryan said.

It might have been a costly win, though, as starting safety Jim Leonhard was lost early with an injured right knee after an interception. He was scheduled to have an MRI exam on his right knee Monday to determine the severity of the injury. Many teammates thought it could be season-ending and a source told ESPNNewYork.com’s Rich Cimini that the Jets believe Leonhard has a torn ligament. The team said it would await the results before making an official determination.

“I’m hopeful it’s not that bad,” Ryan said, “but it’s never good when you’re carted off.”

Tyler Palko was sacked five times by the Jets in a miserable outing by the penalty-plagued Chiefs (5-8) a week after the quarterback earned his first victory as a starter at Chicago. He was 3 for 8 for 11 yards in the half, sacked three times, and the Chiefs had 4 total yards and one first down, compared to the Jets’ 16. Palko had a much better second half, finishing 16 of 32 for 195 yards and a touchdown and an interception.

“The Jets put a lot of pressure (on you),” Palko said. “That’s just what they do. They’re a lot like the Steelers. They have guys all over the place.”

Dwayne Bowe dropped a would-be touchdown pass midway through the fourth quarter, but things got ugly for the Chiefs way before that.

In the most brutal stretch for Kansas City, the Chiefs were penalized five times for 81 yards during the Jets’ final touchdown drive. One of those was an unsportsmanlike conduct call on coach Todd Haley, who let his frustrations out on the officials. Kansas City finished with 11 penalties.

“That generally gets you beat,” said Haley, who wouldn’t elaborate on what he said to the officials. “The one thing we can’t do is lose our composure on calls.”

Sanchez’s 1-yard run gave the Jets a score on their first drive, the second straight game they’ve done that, but it began ominously as he had to call the timeout.

“That wasn’t great,” Ryan said. “That’s not going to go on my coaching resume.”

An 11-play, 77-yard drive followed, jumpstarted by Greene’s 31-yard rumble on the opening snap. On third-and-goal from the 3, Sanchez threw incomplete into the end zone, but Chiefs cornerback Javier Arenas was called for holding, giving the Jets a new set of downs at the 1. Sanchez then took the snap, faked the handoff to Greene and it appeared every Chiefs player bit as the Jets quarterback rolled to his left and strolled into the end zone untouched.

After Leonhard was injured and carted off the field, Sanchez dumped the ball off quickly to Greene, who zipped down the left sideline 36 yards before going out of bounds at the 2. Sanchez found Holmes in the middle of the end zone two plays later for a 4-yard touchdown and a 14-3 lead.

Greene’s 7-yard touchdown run put New York ahead 21-3 after a called fumble was overturned by officials. Tomlinson made it 28-3 less than 2 minutes later when he took a screen pass from Sanchez, made a few cutback moves and got a big block from center Nick Mangold for a 19-yard touchdown. It marked the first time the Jets scored 28 points in an opening half since scoring 40 against St. Louis in 2008.

Added Haley: “It was probably our worst half of football. I don’t know if it’s even close this season.”

Things really started getting out of hand midway through the third quarter when the Chiefs were called for three straight penalties, including an unsportsmanlike conduct on an irate Haley. A few plays later, Brandon Flowers and Kendrick Lewis were called for consecutive pass interference penalties, bringing the ball to the 4. On third-and-goal, Sanchez took the snap and rolled into the end zone for a 3-yard touchdown — his career-high fifth TD run of the season — and a 35-3 lead.

One of the few highlights for the Chiefs came when Jerheme Urban caught a 24-yard touchdown pass — in between four Jets defenders — to make it 35-10.

Sione Pouha tackled Jackie Battle for a safety late in the game after T.J. Conley’s punt was downed at the 1.

“It felt good,” Greene said, “to put a lot of points on the board and dominate.”

— Associated Press —

Reports: Pujols Accepts $254 Million Offer From Angels


In a surprise move, it appears superstar slugger Albert Pujols plans to sign with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.

Multiples sources are reporting that the Halos landed “The Machine” to a ten-year deal worth at least 250-million dollars.

The pact also includes a full no-trade clause for the three-time MVP.

Pujols has spent his entire eleven-year career with the St. Louis Cardinals.

The 31-year-old Pujols batted .299 with 37 home runs and 99 RBI last season. It was the only season in his career that he didn’t register at least 100 RBI and hit better than .300. Over his career, the power-hitting first baseman has 445 dingers to go along with a .328 average and 1,329 runs batted in.

Pujols’ contract is subject to a physical. It is the second-highest in baseball history and only the third to break the $200 million barrier, following Alex Rodriguez’s $252 million, 10-year deal with Texas before the 2001 season and A-Rod’s $275 million, 10-year contract with the Yankees before the 2008 season.

Pujols had turned down an offer from the Cardinals about a year ago, but St. Louis was still in the bidding as of Wednesday. Sources say the Cardinals offered the first baseman a nine-year deal worth just less than $200 million

Cardinals select Komatsu in Rule 5 Draft

The St. Louis Cardinals selected outfielder Erik Komatsu from the Washington Nationals’ Syracuse affiliate in the Major League portion of the Rule 5 draft today.

Komatsu (ko-MAHT-su), 24, split the 2011 season between Double-A affiliates of the Milwaukee Brewers and Washington Nationals batting .277 with seven home runs, 48 RBI and 21 stolen bases.

The 5-foot-10, 175 lb., right-handed hitting prospect was originally drafted by the Brewers in the eighth round of the 2008 first-year player draft out of Cal-State Fullerton.  He has a career minor league batting average of .302 compiled over four seasons covering 348 games and 1298 at bats.

Komatsu had a breakout season in 2010 as the Brewers’ Minor League Player of the Year, batting .323 with five home runs, 63 RBI and 28 stolen bases in 130 games at Class-A Brevard County of the Florida State League.  He led the FSL in runs scored (90), on base percentage (.413) and walks (68); and ranked second in the league in batting average (.323) and hits (157).  Komatsu was rated by Baseball America as having the “Best Strike Zone Discipline” and “Best Hitter for Average” in the Brewers system.

The Cardinals paid the Nationals $50,000 to acquire Komatsu and must keep him on their Major League roster or disabled list for the entire season or have to offer him back to the Nationals for $25,000.

During the Triple-A phase of the Rule 5 Draft, the Cardinals selected right-handed pitcher Steven “Shooter” Hunt (2-0, 7.38 ERA in 2011, Fort Myers-A) off the Minnesota Twins’ New Britain roster and left-handed pitcher Barret Browning (2-1, 4.61 ERA in 2011, Salt Lake-AAA) from the Los Angeles Angels’ Arkansas roster.  Both pitchers will be added to the Memphis (AAA) roster for the 2012 season.

— Cardinals Media Relations —

Chiefs add two to practice squad

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Wednesday that the team has added OL Rob Bruggeman and WR Zeke Markshausen to the practice squad.

Bruggeman (6-4, 286) has played in two games with Atlanta (2010-11). He originally entered the NFL as a rookie free agent with Tampa Bay in 2009. Bruggeman was a second-team All-Big Ten selection as a senior at Iowa.

Markshausen (5-11, 185) went to training camp with Kansas City in 2011 and Chicago in 2010. He played in 27 games at Northwestern, catching 92 passes for 864 yards with three TDs. He added four carries for nine yards. As a senior, he registered 91 receptions for 858 yards with three scores. His 91 catches were the second-highest seasonal total in Northwestern history. He was an all-conference selection at North Boone High School in Poplar Grove, Ill.

— Chiefs Public Relations —

Chiefs sign tackle David Mims to 53-man roster

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Tuesday that the club has signed T David Mims to the 53-man roster.

Mims (6-8, 335) spent the first 11 games of the 2011 season on the Chiefs practice squad after entering the NFL as a rookie free agent with the club.

He opened 42 games as a four-year starter at Virginia Union, earning All-America honors his final two seasons.

— Chiefs Public Relations —

Royals sign relief pitcher Broxton to one-year contract

The Kansas City Royals announced today that the club has agreed to terms with right-handed relief pitcher Jonathan Broxton on a one-year Major League contract for the 2012 season, pending a physical exam.  Consistent with club policy, terms of the contract were not disclosed.

“We are delighted to add someone as talented as Jonathan to our bullpen,” Royals GM Dayton Moore said.  “He will be used in a set up role to closer Joakim Soria and will help solidify what we feel is a young and talented bullpen.”

The 27-year-old Broxton was a two-time National League All-Star (2009, 2010) while playing for the Los Angeles Dodgers, including picking up the save for the National League in the 2010 Midsummer Classic in Anaheim.  Since debuting in 2005 for the Dodgers, Broxton has compiled a 25-20 record with 84 saves and a 3.19 ERA in 386 appearances, all in relief.

In 392.0 career innings, the 6-foot-4 right-hander has struck out 503, a ratio of 11.55 strikeouts per nine innings which is the third-highest in baseball since 2005 among pitchers with at least 350 innings.  Broxton was 1-2 with seven saves and a 5.68 ERA in just 14 games for the Dodgers in 2011 before being placed on the Disabled List on May 6 with bone spurs in his right elbow that eventually required arthroscopic surgery on September 19.

— Royals Media Relations —

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