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Moustakas homers but Royals fall to Angels

Associated Press

Angels manager Mike Scioscia didn’t mince words during his closed-door meeting with his top three run producers: Torii Hunter, Bobby Abreu and Vernon Wells. The offense wasn’t getting the job done, and they were being held accountable.

The rest of the Los Angeles hitters must have been listening outside the door of Scioscia’s office during the expletive-laced session, because the team responded with a big night at the plate.

Erick Aybar opened the scoring with a three-run triple, Abreu came home with the go-ahead run on reliever Aaron Crow’s second wild pitch of the seventh inning, and the Angels snapped a season-worst six-game losing streak with a 7-5 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Saturday.

Howie Kendrick had three hits, including a pair of RBI singles, and the slumping Wells singled his first three times up.

Scioscia called the meeting before batting practice to impress upon his three veteran All-Stars their responsibilities as a trio in the middle of the lineup to wake up a slumbering offense that had averaged two runs over the previous nine games.

“Man, he cursed us out. It was pretty bad,” Hunter said. “The words he used in there really hurt our feelings, but it actually pumped us up to keep going. He really cursed me out. It wasn’t fun. But I appreciate that meeting. Today we had a lot of fight. We got better swings from everybody and played the game the right way. It was a lot of fun. That’s what we have to continue doing.”

Hunter, Abreu and Wells were a combined 4 for 10 with two walks and no RBIs. Hunter prevented the Royals from taking the lead in the seventh when he fielded Jeff Francoeur’s single to right field and threw out Melky Cabrera at the plate for his eighth outfield assist this season.

“I had a clean scoop on it and I just told myself to make a nice, accurate throw to the plate and give Jeff Mathis something he could handle,” Hunter said. “I knew that if they sent him, he was dead. I couldn’t believe that they sent him.”

Royals reliever Tim Collins (3-3) was replaced by Crow after giving up a pair of one-out walks in the bottom half. Abreu scored on the wild pitch to Alberto Callaspo, who was intentionally walked. Wells and Callaspo executed a double steal, and Wells scored on Kendrick’s single off Crow’s left foot.

Scott Downs (4-2) retired all four batters he faced to get the win, and rookie Jordan Walden pitched a scoreless ninth for his 14th save in 17 chances. He struck out Eric Hosmer and Francoeur before retiring Billy Butler on a fly to right with the potential tying runs at second and third.

“It feels good to get that six-game losing streak out of the way. It was ugly,” Hunter said. “I almost jumped up and down after catching that last flyball. I felt like I won the World Series.”

Angels right-hander Joel Pineiro came up short again in his sixth attempt to get his 100th major league victory. He was charged with five runs and seven hits over 5 1/3 innings, leaving with a 5-4 lead before Matt Treanor greeted Rich Thompson with a tying RBI single. It was the seventh hit the Australian-born righty allowed in his last four appearances.

“The situation that’s going on has nothing to do with 100 wins,” Pineiro said. “Honestly, I wanted to win for the team. I didn’t care if it was 100, 300, whatever. I mean, I just wanted to get back on track and do what I’m supposed to be doing. I’m just hoping that when it turns around, it turns around big. There’s no excuse tonight. I got the runs. For some reason, my off-speed stuff was better than my sinker.”

Mike Moustakas tried to score on a safety squeeze by Chris Getz moments later, and was cut down at the plate by first baseman Kendrick’s throw to Mathis. Alcides Escobar walked, loading the bases, but Thompson came back to strike out Alex Gordon.

Moustakas, the second overall pick in the 2007 draft and one of nine rookies on the Royals’ roster, hit his first major league home run in his sixth plate appearance — a solo shot that landed in the second row above the 18-foot wall in right-center with two outs in the fourth inning and trimmed the Angels’ lead to 5-3.

“It was awesome,” said teammate Eric Hosmer, who played with Moustakas in Triple-A and came up to the majors a month before he did. “Everyone was really happy for him. And for him to do it here in his hometown with his family watching, it was a special moment for him. He’s as big a competitor as anybody in this clubhouse. When he gets hot, there’s no turning back. These first couple of games, he’s looked really comfortable at the plate, and it’s going to be a fun ride for him from here on out.”

Cabrera narrowed the gap to 5-4 in the fifth with an RBI single.

Wells led off the Angels’ four-run second against Felipe Paulino with a single before Los Angeles loaded the bases with none out. Aybar then smacked a 1-2 pitch inside first base and down the line to clear the bases, and Maicer Izturis drove him in with a sacrifice fly.

Two of the runs were unearned, the result of a fielding error by Getz on a routine grounder to second by Callaspo.

The Angels tacked on another unearned run in the third, after Wells singled again and got to second on an errant pickoff throw by Paulino — the first error by a Royals pitcher since Jeremy Jeffress’ wild pickoff throw April 18 against Cleveland. Kendrick drove in Wells from third with an infield hit.

Cardinals get beat by Greinke, Brewers Saturday

Associated Press

The last time Zack Greinke put together a winning streak like this, he finished his season with a Cy Young Award. The Milwaukee Brewers are looking to ride him a lot further than just an individual accolade.

Greinke outpitched fellow Cy Young winner Chris Carpenter for his sixth consecutive victory and Rickie Weeks hit a go-ahead, two-run homer to lift the Brewers over the St. Louis Cardinals 5-3 on Saturday night.

“So far, it’s better than I ever could’ve imagined. We’re playing great, it’s fun to watch us play and it’s been working out good,” said Greinke, who was traded in the offseason after being the ace for seven losing years in Kansas City. “We’re scoring a lot of runs, I haven’t put up a bunch of zeros, but it’s been good enough to keep us in the game.”

Milwaukee is the hottest team in baseball since Greinke won his first game on May 9 and the Brewers have pulled within a half-game of St. Louis for the NL Central lead.

“I know it’s close,” Greinke said.

Prince Fielder hit his seventh homer in the last eight games and Corey Hart added a two-run double for the Brewers, who keep improving on their major league-best home record.

“That’s what’s great about this place, it gets rockin’ and rollin’ and it’s nice to see on June 11th what it’s like. Hopefully we’ll give them something on September, October 11th to see how loud they can get,” Brewers third baseman Casey McGehee said. “Win this series, sweep this series, get swept, there’s still a whole lot of baseball left.”

Lance Berkman homered off Greinke (6-1) to give St. Louis a 2-1 lead in the sixth, but Milwaukee scored four times in the bottom of the inning off Carpenter (1-6) on Weeks’ shot and Hart’s double.

Daniel Descalso’s run-scoring double cut Milwaukee’s lead to 5-3 in the seventh, but reliever Kameron Loe pitched a quiet eighth and John Axford converted his 14th straight save opportunity and 17th overall in the ninth.

“Whether it’s because they’re in first, whether it’s just because they’re a great team we’re playing, it’s just a little different atmosphere,” Brewers manager Ron Roenicke said.

Milwaukee is off to its best start in franchise history at Miller Park at 24-9. St. Louis came into town with the most road wins in the majors at 20, but the Cardinals will try to avoid being swept out of first place on Sunday.

“The good thing is we’ve still got a lot of time left in the summer, so we have got to keep on playing hard,” Cardinals right fielder Jon Jay said. “There’s a bunch of games left. There is still plenty of baseball to be played, and there are going to be more close games like tonight, so we just have to stay positive.”

Greinke, the 2009 AL Cy Young Award winner who started 6-0 that year, missed the first month of the season with a cracked rib and lost his first start against Atlanta. Since then, he’s 6-0 in his last seven appearances coinciding with Milwaukee’s ascent in the standings.

Greinke was sharp again with nine strikeouts over seven innings, helping the Brewers (37-28) reach nine games over .500 for the first time in more than two years.

“He’s an exciting player,” Hart said. “The fans see him out there, they get into it a little more and we play well behind him. I don’t know if it’s a coincidence, but we all know since he got here we’ve been a really good team.”

Fielder put Milwaukee ahead in the second on a 420-foot solo homer, his 18th this season. The ball ricocheted so hard off the outfield railing that shortstop Ryan Theriot retrieved it in shallow center field. Greinke has been impressed by Fielder’s power surge.

“If you’re being consistent, and then you have hot streaks, too, that’s pretty unheard of. That’s what he’s done so far,” Greinke said. “Prince is just good and then better so far.”

St. Louis answered with Yadier Molina’s two-out, run-scoring double in the fourth and Berkman’s solo shot in the sixth to go ahead 2-1, setting the stage for Milwaukee’s big inning.

Greinke started with a single and Weeks followed with an opposite-field homer to right. Hart’s two-out double made it 5-2 after Carpenter uncharacteristically walked Fielder and McGehee.

Carpenter, the 2005 NL Cy Young Award winner, has lost his last four decisions and is off to his worst start since beginning his career 1-7 in Toronto in 1997.

“I’m fine,” Carpenter said. “I’ve been around too long to concern myself with what my record is and what I’m doing.”

Jay made an over-the-shoulder diving catch near the right-field wall to end the fourth, banging awkwardly into the lower padding. The extraordinary effort left Carpenter with a smile of disbelief as he walked toward the dugout, but the good times for the Cardinals wouldn’t last long.

“We scrapped all the way,” manager Tony La Russa said. “It was well-played, well-pitched. They pitched a little better, they hit a little better. That’s the difference.”

Royals open series in Anaheim with 4-2 win

Associated Press

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Jeff Francis survived a shaky sixth inning to get his first road victory of the season, left fielder Alex Gordon threw out a runner at home plate and the Kansas City Royals beat the Los Angeles Angels 4-2 Friday night.

Melky Cabrera and Billy Butler each hit solo homers for the Royals. Former first-round draft pick Mike Moustakas went 1 for 3 in his big league debut.

Francis (3-6) pitched 6 1/3 innings in his third start against the Angels this season, allowing two runs and eight hits after being staked to a 4-0 lead. The left-hander, who struck out three and walked one, hadn’t won a road game since beating Florida on July 20, 2010, while pitching for Colorado.

Cardinals get shutout in series opener at Milwaukee

Associated Press

MILWAUKEE — Chris Narveson needed to beat a top team to restore his confidence after a string of poor outings. The fact that it was the franchise that gave up on him was simply a bonus.

Narveson scattered six hits over eight innings and the Milwaukee Brewers kept rolling at home even after a small fire in the ballpark, beating the St. Louis Cardinals 8-0 on Friday night.

“I think you always need an outing like this,” Narveson said. “It’s definitely a good feeling to be able to go out there and just go out and get back to base one and get yourself set.”

Narveson (3-4) began his career as a Cardinals draft pick, but he’s being counted on to play an important role in Milwaukee’s rotation as the fifth starter after having no competition in spring training.

“It was huge for me to see it,” Brewers manager Ron Roenicke said. “When I see things, I see things as I want him to get it going, not so much what the outcome of the game is. I know we’re going to need him.”

Tony La Russa managed his 5,000th game for the Cardinals, but even he saw something new — a fire in a ballpark after smoke billowed in right field from a concession stand’s malfunctioning popcorn machine in the sixth.

“No kidding? I hadn’t seen that one,” La Russa said. “I wasn’t sure what it was.”

Ryan Braun and Corey Hart homered as Milwaukee improved to 23-9 at home, the best mark in the majors. The Brewers could take first place in the NL Central from the Cardinals with a three-game sweep of this weekend series.

“I think that’s the last thing on anybody’s minds right now, we just want to go out there, play hard, play to win and whatever happens happens,” Brewers catcher Jonathan Lucroy said. “If we play up to our potential we can beat anybody out there.”

The Brewers got off to a solid start by roughing up Kyle Lohse (7-3) and chasing him after five innings. Lohse has lost five straight to Milwaukee and hasn’t won in Miller Park for six years.

Not many other teams have, either.

Milwaukee dropped two of three against the Mets in its previous series, but has not lost consecutive games at home this season even without a big hit by Prince Fielder, who went 0 for 1 with two walks and a hit by pitch.

“I think the big thing is it’s not going to be Prince and Braun every night,” Craig Counsell said. “Those guys have really carried us offensively this year.”

Narveson was sharp throughout after going 0-1 with a 10.66 ERA in his previous three starts. He only had more than one baserunner in the eighth and he sprinted off the mound after striking out Jon Jay to end the threat.

“I think it’s a good start to the series and a good thing for him personally just being able to go out and get that confidence knowing that he can put away teams like that, of that caliber,” Lucroy said.

Counsell tripled in the third, then slid headfirst around the tag of catcher Yadier Molina on Narveson’s safety squeeze. Nyjer Morgan followed with a sacrifice fly two batters later to give the Brewers a 2-0 lead.

Lohse got out of a bases-loaded jam in the fourth, but wouldn’t be so lucky against Braun, who drove a pitch the opposite way for his 14th homer this season in the fifth.

Hart followed with his homer and Rickie Weeks singled in a run off reliever Ryan Franklin as thick, sweet smelling smoke wafted down from the second deck to the first level and field of play. No one was hurt in the fire and a small section of the Miller Park roof on a chilly, 52-degree night was opened to help clear the air.

“You know when you’re around camp fires and there’s almost a burning in your eyes, that’s what it was like,” said Hart, the right fielder. “It helped us more, though, because we had the lead.”

Royals, Cardinals unite for Joplin relief efforts

by Royals Media Relations

The Kansas City Royals and St. Louis Cardinals have announced that their upcoming three-game series, set for June 17-19 at Busch Stadium, will be dedicated to Joplin tornado victims and will feature a number of fundraisers and awareness efforts dedicated to Joplin relief.  In partnership with Major League Baseball and the Major League Baseball Players Association, both clubs will wear a special commemorative “Teams Unite for Joplin” jersey patch during each game of the weekend series.

“It is exciting that our two professional baseball franchises, two of the most prominent and visible organizations in our state, are stepping up to the plate to bolster our Joplin relief efforts,” said Missouri Governor Jay Nixon during his visit to Joplin earlier this week.

“We are proud to partner with the St. Louis Cardinals and other Missouri sports franchises in order to offer as much assistance as possible as we help to rebuild this very proud community,” said Royals President Dan Glass.

The Royals and Cardinals have a number of awareness campaigns and fundraising efforts planned for the series, including:

Commemorative Patch: Fans may help support the Joplin relief effort by purchasing the special “Teams Unite for Joplin” commemorative patch (graphic attached) at Kauffman Stadium.  The patch will be available for $10 beginning Tuesday, June 21 with all proceeds going toward Joplin relief efforts.

“Teams Unite for Joplin” Items Featured in Online Auction: In addition, Royals Charities will host a special online auction featuring commemorative “Teams Unite for Joplin” game-used items from the Royals-Cardinals series.  The auction, which will include game-used bases, home plate and lineup cards with the commemorative logo signed by select Royals and Cardinals players, will open on Thursday, June 16 at www.royals.com/joplin.  The club will also sell a limited number of commemorative “Teams Unite for Joplin” logo baseballs signed by select Royals.  The auction will close on Sunday, June 26 with all proceeds benefiting Royals Charities disaster relief efforts.

Joplin Jersey Hand-Off Fundraiser: The Royals will also host a Joplin Jersey Hand-Off fundraiser on Saturday, June 25, giving fans to opportunity to win one of the autographed “Teams Unite for Joplin” jerseys from a Royals player. During the event, volunteers will sell $1 instant-win scratch tickets with proceeds benefiting the American Red Cross and Royals Charities disaster relief efforts.  Following the club’s 6:10 p.m. game against the Chicago Cubs, winners will be escorted to the field where Royals players and coaches will award the jerseys they wore during the Royals-Cardinals series.  Fans can bid on the opportunity to secure a spot on the field at www.royals.com/joplin.  Please note that this auction item will close on Monday, June 20.

In response to the devastating tornado that ripped through Joplin on May 22, Royals Charities made a $25,000 donation to Heart to Heart International for its relief efforts and made a goodwill trip to the city in conjunction with the Northwest Arkansas Naturals, the club’s Double-A affiliate in Springdale, Ark., on June 6.  In addition, Royals fans generously contributed more than $18,000 during an in-stadium collection that will benefit the American Red Cross relief efforts.

Fans are encouraged to visit www.royals.com/joplin for more details on the club’s disaster relief efforts and to learn about how they can help.

Francoeur, Hochevar lift Royals past Toronto

by Associated Press

After a long, tough homestand, Jeff Francoeur is ready to hit the road.

With Francoeur driving in two runs and Luke Hochevar pitching seven effective innings, the Kansas City Royals ended their longest stretch of home games Thursday with a 3-2 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays. It was just their fourth win in the 11-game stand at Kauffman Stadium.

Now the Royals will open a nine-game trip Friday night against the Los Angeles Angels.

“Maybe this will be good for us, to kind of get out on the road for a while and get away,” Francoeur said. “The homestand started out great, went sour and then we finished on a nice, positive note.”

Hochevar (4-6) won for the first time in seven starts and the Royals survived Joakim Soria’s shaky ninth to split the four-game series with Toronto.

Soria, reclaiming the closer role he lost May 30 after back-to-back blown saves, loaded the bases in the ninth but got his eighth save in 13 opportunities.

“It’s never easy,” Soria said. “The last couple outings, I was pitching good. This was a tough one. We got the win, that’s all that matters.”

In a move that’s certain to have fans stirring, the Royals announced after the game they were bringing up third baseman Mike Moustakas, their 2007 first-round draft pick, and letting him make his much-anticipated major league debut against the Angels. He’ll also be reunited with first baseman Eric Hosmer, the 2008 first-round pick who was brought up on May 6 and has been the Royals’ best hitter.

“I’m really excited. One of my best friends in professional baseball,” Hosmer said. “It’s going to be fun. We’ve been texting back and forth.”

Edwin Encarnacion and Juan Rivera hit one-out singles off Soria, a two-time All-Star, and then Mike McCoy, after being down 0-2, drew his fourth walk of the day to load the bases with two outs. But Soria got Corey Patterson on an infield popup, giving the Royals their fifth win in 19 games.

Hochevar allowed two runs in the fourth but nothing else in seven innings. The right-hander gave up six hits, walked three and struck out three for his first win in seven starts since May 1.

“You never want to go through those stretches,” Hochevar said. “Sometimes they happen. You’ve just got to battle through them and stay positive and continue to pound the strike zone and do what you do.”

Ricky Romero (5-6) pitched an eight-inning complete game for Toronto, allowing three runs on eight hits, with two walks and four strikeouts.

“I hate losing, bottom line, if I got beat by 10 runs or one run,” Romero said. “I’m a competitor. I have heart. I take a lot of pride in that. I hate losing. It’s unfortunate we lost. It stinks.”

Alcides Escobar singled in the third and scored the first run on Hosmer’s soft single into right. Hosmer has hit safely in 10 of his last 11 games.

Melky Cabrera then reached on a fielder’s choice and Francoeur rifled a two-run single into right as the Royals kept the Blue Jays from winning a series in Kansas City for the first time since 2003.

Francoeur was out at the plate on a strong throw from Jose Bautista after Billy Butler singled into right.

In the Blue Jays’ second, Bautista reached on a fielder’s choice, Adam Lind singled and J.P. Arencibia tripled into left field. Mitch Maier made a leap for the ball, but it hit the wall and bounced back toward center field as Lind and Bautista scored.

Aaron Hill walked, but Hochevar retired Encarnacion on a fly ball to end the inning.

The Blue Jays had runners at second and third with two out in the eighth. but Aaron Crow coaxed a grounder out of Arencibia.

Lind was 3-for-4, all singles.

Cardinals roll past Houston in series finale

by Associated Press

Win or lose, Lance Berkman always seems to get his hits at Minute Maid Park.

Berkman broke a tie with an RBI single and pinch-hitter Daniel Descalso had a two-run double in St. Louis’ five-run sixth in the Cardinals’ 9-2 victory over the Houston Astros on Thursday night.

Berkman, the former Astro who hit a solo homer to break up Bud Norris’ no-hit bid in the seventh inning in the Cardinals’ 4-1 loss Wednesday night, snapped a 1-1 tie with a single off the scoreboard in left after Jon Jay singled and Albert Pujols drew a walk off J.A. Happ (3-8).

Mark Hamilton’s fielder’s choice grounder to second baseman Jeff Keppinger scored Pujols, and Wilton Lopez’s bases-loaded walk brought home Hamilton. Then, Descalso delivered the two-run double to cap the inning.

Berkman added his 15th homer in the ninth.

“I’ve got a different uniform on, but it’s still a great place to hit,” Berkman said. “I’m just trying not to make an out. I’ll enjoy it and try to get ready for the game tomorrow.”

In six games at Minute Maid this season, Berkman is hitting .480 with five home runs and 12 RBIs.

Ryan Theriot ended a 20-game hitting streak Wednesday night and started another with a double and his first homer. He’s been watching Berkman.

“Lance has had a great year and I don’t think he’s just picking on the Astros, he’s picking on everybody,” Theriot said. “He’s swung the bat well and been consistent particularly well here but he’s played a lot of games here and he’s comfortable here.”

Lance Lynn (1-1) benefited from the big inning. He pitched five innings, allowed six hits and one run. He walked three and struck out three.

The Astros left the bases loaded with one out in the third. Brett Wallace struck out and Chris Johnson hit into a forceout. Houston loaded the bases with no outs in the seventh and managed one run on Keppinger’s groundout.

“The first three innings felt like the longest innings of my life,” Lynn said. “After that I started getting into a rhythm and throwing more strikes and throwing good pitches. I stopped giving them pitches to hit.”

Happ pitched 5 1/3 innings. He gave up six hits, six earned runs, struck out five and walked two.

“The first five innings Happ threw the ball extremely well and worked out of some things,” Astros manager Brad Mills said. “Offensively, we had some opportunities early in the game. We had our opportunities.”

Theriot doubled down the left-field line to open the game. He was sacrificed to third by Jay and scored on Pujols’ groundout.

Theriot also hit a solo homer in the eighth, and Skip Schumaker had an RBI single in the seventh.

Houston tied it at 1 in the first on single by Wallace, who hit safely for the 12th time in 14 games.

“It’s frustrating,” Happ said. “Six or seven games in a row I start the game and I feel like I’m going to go seven or eight innings.

“Whatever my terrible record, whatever my terrible ERA is, it doesn’t make sense. It’s not the pitcher I am. I’m going to find a way to figure it out. I felt good and just left a few balls up in the sixth inning and the rest is history,” he said.

Hunter Pence singled with two out in the first inning, extending his hitting streak to 20 games. He took second on a wild pitch before scoring on Wallace’s hit.

Pence’s 20-game streak is the longest of his career and the Astros’ longest since Miguel Tejada hit in 21 straight games in 2009. It was little consolation.

“It’s part of the game,” Pence said. “Sometimes you get them, sometimes they get you out.

“He (Lynn) had really good stuff. His fastball jumped out of his hand, kind of effectively wild a little bit. It almost felt like he could locate his curve ball better than his fastball,” he said.

Sporting KC settles for 0-0 draw in first game at Livestrong Park

by Associated Press

Playing at home in a new stadium for the first time wasn’t enough to get Sporting Kansas City a win.

After opening the season with 10 straight road games, Sporting had hoped the debut of Livestrong Sporting Park would see the end of a nine-match winless streak. Instead, a scoreless draw with the Chicago Fire on Thursday night left coach Peter Vermes fuming.

It wasn’t at his team’s effort, especially after Kansas City had to play a man down for much of the second half. Vermes’ ire was directed at referee Michael Kennedy.

Vermes felt Kennedy denied Sporting a penalty kick by not calling a red-card foul when Bratislav Ristic tackled Omar Bravo hard inside the penalty area in the 86th minute.

“Maybe he needs to get his leg broken for it to be a red card,” Vermes said.

Bravo, who had to be taken off the field on a stretcher, stayed out of the controversy.

“That’s the game. That’s soccer,” he said through an interpreter. “It happens. People make mistakes.”

Despite the obvious shot of energy from a loud, standing-room only crowd of 19,925, Kansas City played to its third straight draw and has not won since a season-opening 3-2 victory at Chivas USA.

Chicago also recorded its third straight draw, the second straight without a goal, and has not won in 11 matches since beating Sporting 3-2 at home on March 26. Still, goalkeeper Sean Johnson tried to play up the positive aspects of back-to-back shutouts.

We stressed over the last couple games being compact, being on the same page, and I think it worked tonight,” Johnson said. “It’s definitely a good thing when you can string shutouts together, when your unit’s cohesive.”

The Fire had a late chance when backup Sporting goalkeeper Eric Kronberg failed to hold Dan Paladini’s shot, but Orr Barouch’s point-blank strike hit the crossbar.

“I tried to place the ball and I hit the crossbar,” Barouch said. “I knew I had a chance to win the game, but I just got unlucky.”

Sporting’s best chance came in the 15th minute when Graham Zusi put a shot past Johnson from 8 meters, but Bravo was ruled offside on the play.

Kansas City had to play a man down after the 67th minute, when keeper Jimmy Nielsen drew a red card for handling the ball outside the penalty area.

Kansas City’s rally falls short against Blue Jays

by Associated Press

Adam Lind hit a grand slam and Jayson Nix added a three-run homer to power the Toronto Blue Jays to a 9-8 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday night.

Corey Patterson snapped an 0-for-11 skid with four hits and scored two Toronto runs.

Blue Jays starter Carlos Villanueva (4-0) had one rough inning, the fourth when he allowed four runs, but pitched seven innings, allowing six hits. Villanueva has won his past eight decisions since his last loss, Aug. 17, 2009 at Pittsburgh.

Nix’s home run off rookie left-hander Danny Duffy with Aaron Hill and Rajai Davis aboard put the Blue Jays up 5-4.

Nate Adcock, who replaced Duffy, retired the first two batters in the sixth before walking Mike McCoy and giving up a single to Patterson. Jose Bautista, who leads the majors with 20 homers but has none in 10 games, was walked intentionally, to bring up Lind.

Lind, who had a two-run homer Tuesday, hit the 1-0 pitch out to left for his second career grand slam. Lind’s first grand slam was Aug. 31, 2009 at Texas.

Juan Rivera drove in the first two Blue Jays runs with singles in the first and third innings.

Villanueva, who has held opponents to a .156 batting average on the road, gave up a three-run homer to Melky Cabrera in the third. Alex Gordon’s sacrifice fly drove in the first Kansas City run.

Billy Butler’s three-run homer with two out in the eighth off Octavio Dotel cut the Blue Jays lead to two runs. Jeff Francoeur, who had three hits, and Eric Hosmer, who walked, scored on Butler’s fifth home run.

Casey Jensen worked the ninth for his first save since 2009, but gave up a RBI-double to Gordon with two outs.

Cardinals get two-hit in loss at Houston

by Associated Press

Bud Norris took a no-hitter into the seventh inning and teamed with Mark Melancon hold the St. Louis Cardinals to two hits in the Houston Astros’ 4-1 win Wednesday night.

Norris (4-4) pitched eight scoreless innings, allowing only former Astro Lance Berkman’s solo homer with two outs. The blast on the fifth pitch of the at bat sailed just over the glove of Hunter Pence and into the stands in right field. Norris watched the play before pounding his hand in his glove and wiping sweat from his cheek.

The 26-year-old in his second full season in the majors relied on fastballs thrown between 90-95 mph mixed with sliders and changeups to keep the Cardinals off balance.

Melancon yielded a two-out double to Albert Pujols in the ninth before retiring Berkman for his sixth save.

Norris, who entered the game averaging more than a strikeout an inning in his 50 previous major league appearances, struck out two and walked five in a game that tied the longest outing of his career.

Pence had an RBI triple to extend his career-best hitting streak to 19 games and help snap a four-game skid for the Astros.

Cardinals starter Jaime Garcia (6-2) allowed seven hits and three runs in five innings.

Norris walked the leadoff batter in the first, fourth and fifth innings, but faced the minimum through five thanks to three double plays by Houston’s defense.

He walked Matt Carpenter with one out in the sixth, but got his first strikeout of the game to retire pinch hitter Daniel Descalso before sitting down Ryan Theriot.

Clint Barmes made a diving catch on a ball hit by Jon Jay for the first out of the seventh inning. Norris pumped his fist excitedly after Barmes made the belly-flopping grab. Pujols followed with a long fly out to center field before the homer by Berkman, who played 12 seasons for the Astros before a trade last year.

Berkman, who also homered on Tuesday night, was booed as he rounded the bases on his 14th home run that made it 3-1.

Norris walked Carpenter with two outs in the eighth inning before he struck out pinch hitter Mark Hamilton.

The speedy Jason Bourgeois, who was making his first start since coming off the disabled list on this weekend, singled in the fifth inning before stealing second base and reaching third on a lineout by Jeff Keppinger. He made it 3-0 by scoring on a single by Jason Michaels.

Keppinger singled with one out in the third inning before scoring on Pence’s triple that landed near the back of Tal’s Hill in center field. Pence came home on a groundout by Carlos Lee to put Houston up 2-0.

The Astros got no-out doubles in the first and second innings, but were unable to string together enough hits to score in those innings.

J.R. Towles doubled before scoring on a single by Michael Bourn to push the lead to 4-1 in the eighth inning.

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