We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Royals unveil 2012 All-Star game logo Tuesday

The official logo for the 2012 All-Star game has been unveiled.

Next year’s game is at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, and the Royals were well-represented when the logo made its debut Tuesday. All-Star relievers Aaron Crow and Joakim Soria and manager Ned Yost all attended the unveiling.

Kansas City has not hosted the All-Star game since 1973, leading mayor Sly James to declare “I just want to say to Major League Baseball: We’ve missed you.”

The Royals’ blue and metallic gold are in the logo, which has a family crest, accompanied by flags and adorned with stars.

Audio from Day 4 at Chiefs Training Camp

The Kansas City Chiefs had a walkthrough and a normal practice session on day four of training camp Monday at Missouri Western State University.  Click below to here interviews with coaches and players after the second workout of the day.
Defensive Coordinator Romeo Crennel[audio:http://www.stjosephpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/RomeoCrennel.mp3|titles=RomeoCrennel]
Kicker Ryan Succop[audio:http://www.stjosephpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/RyanSuccop.mp3|titles=RyanSuccop]

Cardinals lose series opener at first-place Milwaukee

The Milwaukee Brewers keep winning at home, even if they’re stumped over the reasons why they’ve been suddenly so good at Miller Park.

Nyjer Morgan hit a go-ahead, three-run double to cap a five-run fifth inning off Cardinals ace Chris Carpenter and the Brewers rallied for a 6-2 win over St. Louis on Monday night and extend their season-best winning streak to seven.

The Brewers own the best home record in the majors at 40-14 after going 40-41 at Miller Park last year.

“We feel like we have that extra confidence here, but for whatever reason the fans get so behind us and we feel like we’re never out of anything,” Brewers right fielder Corey Hart said. “We always knew this was going to be a big series … Winning the first one is huge. It gives us a little momentum going forward.”

Milwaukee only had one hit off Carpenter before the fifth, when the first six batters reached, including Morgan’s decisive double.

“”Everything worked out,” Brewers manager Ron Roenicke said. “You can’t explain why things fell apart, basically, for them and go well for us.”

Milwaukee’s timely hitting helped the Brewers (61-49) move 3 1-2 games ahead of St. Louis in the NL Central, their biggest lead of the season. The Brewers and Cardinals will play 11 more times this year.

Zack Greinke (9-4) allowed a first-inning, two-run homer to Matt Holliday, but the Brewers offense prevailed again in the second matchup this season of the former Cy Young winners after Carpenter (6-8) appeared in complete control riding a five-game winning streak.

Yuniesky Betancourt singled to lead off the fifth and Casey McGehee executed a hit-and-run single past second baseman Skip Schumaker to put runners at the corners.

Jonathan Lucroy’s chopper went over the head of third baseman David Freese to score a run and the Cardinals’ defense failed to cover first or third when Greinke laid down a bunt that loaded the bases.

Hart followed with an RBI single that tied it at 2 before Morgan hit his bases-clearing double to put Milwaukee up 5-2. The Brewers tacked on a run in the seventh on Ryan Braun’s double off Mitchell Boggs.

“We find ways to scrap,” Hart said. “Whether it’s Prince or Yuni or Casey, it’s nice to have different guys getting up there for guys.”

Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said it was tough to see Carpenter (6-8) get knocked around without a ball driven well.

“It was a mess,” La Russa said. “They got five runs off not enough contact. Some of that, we could have defended better. Some of it was tough breaks.”

It was the first time Carpenter had given up five earned runs since he lost to Greinke, the 2009 AL Cy Young winner, on June 11. Milwaukee is 4-0 against St. Louis at Miller Park this season and Greinke is 7-0 at home.

“I know when we come home we’re going to play well,” Roenicke said. “I still can’t tell you what the reasons are. It’s a feeling that the guys have when they’re home, they know they’re going to play well and it goes a long way.”

New acquisition Rafael Furcal singled to lead off the game for St. Louis and Holliday hit a two-out homer, his first since participating in the Home Run Derby during the All-Star break.

St. Louis loaded the bases in the fifth with one out after Greinke walked Holliday and allowed hits to Lance Berkman and Freese, but Schumaker grounded into an inning-ending double play.

“I couldn’t believe that they turned it,” Greinke said. “That was real nice.”

Schumaker didn’t think so.

“I was safe. That was a huge play,” Schumaker said. “It is upsetting because it is a big play in the game.”

Greinke extended Milwaukee’s streak of strong starting pitching by going six innings and striking out five. The Brewers rotation has allowed three runs or less in 17 straight starts dating to the second game after the All-Star break.

St. Louis (57-52) was in a virtual tie atop the NL Central with Milwaukee and Pittsburgh on July 24, but the Brewers’ winning streak has helped them open up a lead after St. Louis stumbled to a 4-3 mark in a homestand against the Astros and Cubs before heading on this seven-game road trip.

“It was the classic matchup,” Schumaker said. “Greinke had great stuff going and Carp had great stuff going. It is just too bad they won and we didn’t.”

— Associated Press —

Todd Haley Press Conference – Monday 8/1

Click below to listen to Kansas City Chiefs head coach Todd Haley speak with the media Monday.

Part 1[audio:http://www.stjosephpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/801A.mp3|titles=801A]
Part 2[audio:http://www.stjosephpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/801B.mp3|titles=801B]

Kansas City resigns OT Barry Richardson

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Monday that T Barry Richardson has signed his restricted free agent tender.

Richardson (6-6, 319) has played in 32 games (17 starts) in three campaigns with Kansas City (2008-10). He started all 16 games a year ago, 15 at right tackle and one at left tackle. He entered the NFL as the first of Kansas City’s two selections in the sixth round (170th overall) in 2008.

Richardson appeared in 49 contests at Clemson, starting 46 games. He was a three-year starter at Wando High School in Mt. Pleasant, S.C.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Butler named Co-AL Player of the Week

Kansas City Royals designated hitter Billy Butler was named Co-American League Player of the Week with Los Angeles Angels pitcher Ervin Santana today.

Butler batted .406 (13-for-32) from July 25-31 in seven games on the Royals road trip, hitting five home runs and driving in 12.  He added a pair of doubles and scored six times, slugging .938 for the week as the Royals went 4-3 at Boston and Cleveland.  The award was Butler’s third of his career, as he earned the honor from August 3-9, 2009 and September 7-13, 2009.  The Player of the Week award was Kansas City’s first of 2011, the first since Brayan Pena on September 6-12, 2010 and the 71st time a Royal has earned the honor.

Santana tossed his first career no-hitter at Cleveland on July 27, striking out 10 and walking one.

— Royals Media Relations —

Chiefs sign former San Diego LB Brandon Siler

The Kansas City Chiefs announced on Monday that the club has signed free agent LB Brandon Siler.

Siler (6-2, 239) has played in 58 regular season games (12 starts) with San Diego (2007-10), recording 124 tackles (89 solo) and 3.0 sacks (-26.0 yards). He also has two interceptions, four passes defensed, one fumble recovery and 56 special teams tackles. He has appeared in five postseason contests (one start), compiling six tackles (four solo) and nine special teams tackles. He entered the NFL as a seventh-round selection (240th overall) of San Diego in 2007.

The Daytona Beach, Fla. native was a member of the University of Florida squad that won the 2007 BCS National Championship Game. Siler was named second-team all-state at Evans High School in Orlando, Fla.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Royals place Davies on 15-day disabled list

The Kansas City Royals announced today that the club has placed right-handed pitcher Kyle Davies on the 15-day Disabled List, retroactive to July 26, with a right shoulder impingement.  The club is expected to recall left-handed relief pitcher Everett Teaford from Omaha (AAA) prior to tomorrow’s game against the Orioles.

Davies has posted a 1-9 record with a 6.75 ERA for the Royals in 13 starts, last pitching on July 25 at Boston and allowing just one run on five hits in six innings in a no decision.

Teaford, 27, is 0-0 with a save in two stints with the Royals, compiling a 2.25 ERA in 16.0 innings.  The left-hander is also 3-2 with a 3.34 ERA in 16 games (three starts) for the Storm Chasers.

— Royals Media Relations —

Audio from Day 3 of Chiefs Training Camp

The Kansas City Chiefs wrapped up day three of training camp at Missouri Western State University in St. Joseph on Sunday.  Click below to here interviews from coaches and players after their workout.

QB Coach Jim Zorn[audio:http://www.stjosephpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/JimZorn.mp3|titles=JimZorn]
Offensive Coordinator/OL CoachBill Muir[audio:http://www.stjosephpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/JimZorn1.mp3|titles=JimZorn]
OL Darryl Harris[audio:http://www.stjosephpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/DarrylLewis.mp3|titles=DarrylLewis]
DL Anthony Toribio[audio:http://www.stjosephpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/AnthonyToribio.mp3|titles=AnthonyToribio]
S Kendrick Lewis[audio:http://www.stjosephpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/KendrickLewis.mp3|titles=KendrickLewis]

Royals win final game at Cleveland

Not even word that pitcher Ubaldo Jimenez had passed his physical could put a smile on Manny Acta’s face Sunday afternoon.

Cleveland’s manager had just watched his team lose 5-3 to Kansas City, which completed a 2-6 homestand and dropped the Indians 2½ games behind Detroit in the AL Central.

“To lose three series in a row in front of our own fans is very disappointing,” Acta said.

The fact Saturday’s blockbuster trade with Colorado was official, giving the Indians an ace pitcher at the top of their rotation, was the only good news Acta got all week.

Cleveland’s two wins on the homestand came on ninth-inning rallies. Rookie Jason Kipnis’ first major league hit drove in the winning run for a victory over Los Angeles on Monday and Matt LaPorta’s three-run homer capped a comeback in Saturday’s victory over Kansas City.

Other than that, the homestand was entirely forgettable. The Indians were no-hit by the Angels’ Ervin Santana and committed five errors on Wednesday. Cleveland suffered a 12-0 loss against the Royals on Friday.

The Indians were outscored 33-15, which doesn’t bode well considering they open a seven-game trip to Boston and Texas that begins Monday night in Fenway Park.

“We didn’t swing the bats very well this homestand,” designated hitter Travis Hafner said. “We’re going to have to score more runs on this trip because we’re playing good offensive teams. We have to start playing better to help out confidence.”

Acta realizes the upcoming trip could be the defining moment of the season.

“We’ve got to go on the road and battle now,” he said. “We’re going to play two very good teams.”

Cleveland’s latest loss came at the hands of an emergency starter. Danny Duffy, starting for the injured Kyle Davies, pitched into the sixth inning and Jeff Francoeur and Alex Gordon homered for Kansas City, sending the Indians to their eighth loss in 10 games.

The last-place Royals have won eight of 12.

Fausto Carmona (5-11) allowed four runs in 7 1/3 innings. The right-hander has one win since June 15 and Acta was less than enthusiastic about the outing.

“He’s throwing well,” Acta said. “That’s all I’m going to say. I’ve seen him and a couple of our guys put together six or seven good ones and go back. I don’t want to swallow my words. Hopefully, he gives us a chance to win every five days.”

Duffy (3-4) allowed two runs in five innings, giving up eight hits and striking out six. He also picked two runners off first.

Davies was scratched about an hour before game time because of the sore right shoulder that’s bothered him for most of the season.

Joakim Soria, who failed to hold a ninth-inning lead in Saturday’s 5-2 loss, recorded his 20th save in 26 chances. Asdrubal Cabrera drew a one-out walk, but Carlos Santana hit into a game-ending double play.

Jimenez’s physical took place Sunday at the team’s spring training facility in Goodyear, Ariz. The Rockies will receive four minor leaguers — pitchers Alex White and Joe Gardner, first baseman Matt McBride and a player to be named, who is expected to be pitcher Drew Pomeranz.

Acta said Jimenez will join the team in Boston. His first start will come against the Rangers.

Kipnis hit his first career home run for the Indians in the fifth. Cabrera doubled and scored on Santana’s RBI triple.

Hafner had an RBI groundout in the eighth as a pinch-hitter.

— Associated Press —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File