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Cards lose to Cubs 2-1, eliminated from playoffs

ST. LOUIS (AP) — The Cardinals were eliminated from postseason contention when Leonys Martin leaped at the center-field fence to rob Paul DeJong of a tying home run with two outs in the 11th inning, preserving the Chicago Cubs’ 2-1 win over St. Louis on Thursday night.

St. Louis, which went 5-14 against its rival, missed the playoffs in consecutive seasons for the first time since 2007 and 2008. At 82-77, the Cardinals are assured their fewest wins since going 78-84 in 2007.

A day after clinched their second straight NL Central title, the defending World Series champions started only two position players who had played in at least 100 games: outfielders Ian Happ and Kyle Schwarber.

Schwarber singled off Matt Bowman (3-6) with one out in the 11th and Davis, who struck out in his first three at-bats, hit a run-scoring double down the left-field line.

Jen-Ho Tseng (1-0) pitched three hitless innings.

Happ homered in the first off Lance Lynn, who allowed three hits in five innings. Lynn is eligible for free agency and likely was making his final start for the Cardinals.

Kyle Hendricks struck out nine and allowed four hits in five innings. Dexter Fowler had an RBI groundout in the sixth against Justin Grimm.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: C Yadier Molina remains in a concussion protocol and likely will not play for the remainder of the season. He was removed from Monday’s game after taking two foul tips off the mask on successive pitches.

UP NEXT

Cubs: LHP Jose Quintana (7-3, 3.50) will face visiting Cincinnati and RHP Robert Stephenson (5-6, 4.86) on Friday. Quintana pitched a three-hit shutout over Milwaukee on Sept. 24.

Cardinals: RHP John Gant (0-0, 3.65) will face Milwaukee and RHP Chase Anderson (11-4, 2.81) on Friday in St. Louis. Gant will be making his second start this season.

— Associated Press —

Chiefs’ Hunt named AFC Offensive Player of the Month & NFL Rookie of the Month

It’s been a month to remember for Kansas City Chiefs’ rookie running back Kareem Hunt.

Hunt was named both the AFC Offensive Player of the Month and the NFL Offensive Rookie of the Month for September on Thursday after tallying 538 yards from scrimmage through his first three games as a professional – the most for a rookie since Billy Sims in 1980 (562).

The rookie tailback ran for 401 yards on 47 carries, averaging 8.5 yards per rush, and caught nine passes for 137 yards. He found the end zone six times, the most by a player through his first three games since Sims (1980) and Dutch Sternaman (1920).

His 246 yards from scrimmage in Week 1 against New England is an NFL record, and he’s the first player to ever score a touchdown of at least 50 yards in each of his first three NFL games.

Additionally, he’s just the ninth player since 1950 to amass at least 100 yards from scrimmage in each of his first three games.

Hunt is just the fourth rookie to ever be named an Offensive Player of the Month, and the first in 17 years, joining Barry Sanders (1989), Edgerrin James (1999) and Mike Anderson (2000). He’s also the first Chief to win an Offensive Rookie of the Month award.

Hunt will look to build on his strong start to his career next week as the Chiefs host the Washington Redskins on Monday Night Football.

— Chiefs.com —

Royals rally for second straight win against Detroit

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Paulo Orlando sparked the Kansas City Royals with his glove early and his bat late.

Orlando hit a two-run homer in the seventh inning, his first of the season, as the Royals rallied from a three-run deficit to beat Detroit 7-4 on Wednesday night, the Tigers’ ninth straight loss.

The centerfielder made a superb running catch in the first inning to rob Nicholas Castellanos of an extra-base hit with two runners on base.

“That was huge,” Royals starter Jason Hammel said. “I thought Nick hit that better, but that’s the friendly confines of The K (Kauffman Stadium) helping out there. You’ve got to hit it pretty well to get it past some of our guys.

“Paulo had a great game tonight overall. He helped me spit the hook there at the end of the game with the two-run homer to put us ahead and the guys added on.”

The Tigers are 4-22 in September and have been outscored 68-30 in the skid. The last time Detroit lost nine in a row was Sept. 1-9, 2005.

“It’s probably more inexperience than anything else,” Tigers lame duck manager Brad Ausmus said. “It’s been tough. We’ve got four wins in the month of September and part of it is we haven’t pitched real well.”

Orlando’s home run was his first since Sept. 19, 2016, going 117 at-bats between long balls.

“Kind of vintage Paulo,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.

Scott Alexander (5-4), the third Kansas City pitcher, picked up the victory with 1 1/3 scoreless innings.

Drew VerHagen (0-3) gave up the home run to Orlando with Alcides Escobar, who had tripled, aboard.

The Royals padded their lead with a three-run eighth, which was highlighted by a two-run double by Escobar. Whit Merrifield scored the first run of the inning on a wild pitch by Chad Bell.

Hammel gave up three runs in the first three innings, but after James McCann’s run-producing double in the third, he did not allow another hit. He retired 11 of the final 12 batters he faced, giving up three runs and six hits over six innings.

Jeimer Candelario drove in three Detroit runs with singles in the first and third innings and a ground out in the ninth.

Melky Cabrera’s two-out single in the bottom of the third scored Merrifield and Alex Gordon, cutting the Tigers’ lead to 3-2.

Tigers starter Jordan Zimmermann was pulled after 84 pitches and six innings, yielding two runs and four hits.

“Obviously, I want to win and everybody in here wants to win,” Zimmermann said. “For me, personally, it was a good start to finish the year.”

Mike Minor got the final two outs for his fourth save in six situations.

CABRERA UPDATE

Tigers 1B Miguel Cabrera, who has two herniated discs, said he will get a second opinion Monday in Miami. “I hope I can take care of this in the offseason, come back next year and try to play every day,” he said Wednesday. “I think I need to change a lot of things in the offseason so I can come here in better shape and not be hurt. I don’t want an injection because I don’t want to put a Band-Aid on my injury. There’s no reason to do that. Let’s do all the therapy I have to do and we’ll see.” He said he initially injured his back in spring training, lifting heavy weights. Cabrera is an 11-time All-Star selection and entered this season as a career .321 hitter with 446 HRs and 1,553 RBI. In 130 games this season, he hit .249 with 16 home runs and 60 RBI. “It’s a nightmare,” he said of the season.

ALL NINE ROMINE

Ausmus plans to play Andrew Romine in all nine positions in the Tigers’ finale Sunday at Minnesota. Romine has played every position but catcher in his career. He caught RHPs Anibal Sanchez and Buck Farmer bullpen sessions Wednesday. Sanchez is the probable Sunday starter. “That would be nice,” Romine said. “I’ve caught him plenty of times between innings. And he doesn’t throw 100. That’s the main thing.” The only other players to play all nine defensive positions in a major league game are Bert Campaneris, Kansas City Athletics, Sept. 8, 1965; Cesar Tovar, Minnesota Twins, Sept. 22, 1968; Scott Sheldon, Texas Rangers, Sept. 6, 2000; and Shane Halter, Tigers, Oct. 1, 2000. Halter had four hits, three RBI and scored the winning run against the Twins. “I’m excited, to be part of history,” Romine said. “I’ll be the fifth one here pretty quick.”

TIGERS SIGN PEDRO’S SON

Pedro Martinez Jr., the son of the Hall of Fame pitcher, signed with the Tigers. Unlike his dad, the younger Martinez, who lives in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, is a third baseman.

UP NEXT

Tigers: LHP Daniel Norris, who has walked 44 in 96 2/3 innings, will start the series finale.

Royals: LHP Danny Duffy will take a 9-9 record into his final start of the year.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis falls to Chicago 5-1 as Cubs clinch NL Central

ST. LOUIS (AP) — The last time the Cubs went to the postseason three straight years was in 1906-08. The World Series champions won the National Central for the second straight year with a 5-1 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Wednesday night.

Under .500 and trailing Milwaukee in the division race at the All-Star break, the Cubs turned things around with a stellar second half.

“It was tough,” starter John Lackey said. “It’s always a challenge and we got a lot of people’s best shots. We played well and we’re back in the playoffs and we’ll see what happens.”

Addison Russell hit a three-run homer and Lackey pitched six strong innings for Chicago.

The Cubs are the first defending World Series champion to win their division the next season since the 2009 Philadelphia Phillies and the first defending champion to reach the playoffs the next season since the Cardinals won the wild card in 2012.

“It’s fun to be a team that people want to beat,” Cubs infielder Kris Bryant said. “We embrace that and we’re going to go with that for as long as we can. It feels good right now knowing they (the Cardinals) always beat up on us before and now we’re able to kind of get of a taste of that, too.”

The Cubs became the second visiting team to celebrate a title at Busch Stadium III. The 2009 Los Angeles Dodgers won the NLDS at St. Louis.

“It’s a blessing to be in a situation to win a World Series on a team and win a division in a tough division the very next year,” Cubs outfielder Jason Heyward said. “That’s not my plan. That’s someone else’s plan there. It just happened to be here. Fans, rivalry, whatever, it is what it is, but I know we had a lot of fun competing.”

Lackey (12-11) retired the final 10 batters he faced. The former Cardinal and three-time World Series winner struck out three and gave up two hits and two walks.

“I’ve got to keep telling these kids (young Cubs players) `Don’t take anyone of these for granted. You never know if it’s your last one,” Lackey said. “If you start thinking this is something easy, it’s time for you to go home.”

Six Cubs relievers combined for three scoreless innings.

Cardinals starter Michael Wacha needed just 60 pitches to cruise through the first six innings, striking out eight, before running into trouble in the seventh. Anthony Rizzo and Bryant started the inning with singles and Russell drove a 2-1 pitch over the left field wall to give the Cubs a 3-1 lead.

Wacha (12-9) was chased after allowing the first six Cubs to reach base in the seventh. Heyward and Tommy La Stella had RBI doubles as the Cubs sent 10 batters to the plate against three St. Louis pitchers.

Paul DeJong’s single scored Jedd Gyorko to give the Cardinals a 1-0 lead in the second.

Former Cub Dexter Fowler came to the plate with the bases loaded as the tying run in the eighth, but Carl Edwards Jr. got him to fly weakly to right field, ending the Cardinals’ threat.

The loss drops the Cardinals elimination number to one.

Cardinals manager Mike Matheny didn’t watch the Cubs’ celebration.

“Usually when I watch we don’t have any more games to play,” Matheny said. “We’re getting ready for tomorrow. When I watch in the playoffs it’s because our season was over. Our season is not over.”

The Cubs will draw Washington in the NLDS, but Lackey isn’t focused on the Nationals yet.

“I think we’re going to have a good time tonight,” Lackey said. “I don’t really care about the Nationals.”

BAD BLOOD

Rizzo was hit by a 99 mph fastball on the first pitch he saw from Wacha with two outs and nobody on in the first. Rizzo was visibly upset after getting hit, throwing his bat over-handed towards the Cubs’ dugout.

 

Earlier in the day, Cardinals OF Tommy Pham told media that he believed he was hit by a pitch on purpose by the Cubs in Tuesday night’s game.

Both batters were hit in the ribs.

TRAINING ROOM

Cubs: OF Albert Almora Jr. (bruised right shoulder) is day-to-day.

Cardinals: C Yadier Molina will undergo further testing under the league’s concussion protocol.

UP NEXT

Cubs: RHP Kyle Hendricks (7-5, 3.14 ERA) has made eight consecutive quality starts. He is 2-2 with a 3.62 ERA in his career against St. Louis, including taking a no-hitter into the ninth inning in his last start at Busch Stadium on Sept. 12, 2016.

Cardinals: RHP Lance Lynn (11-8, 3.47 ERA) could possibly be making his final start as a Cardinal after six seasons with the club. Lynn, an unrestricted free agent, is 6-6 with a 4.18 ERA in 18 career appearances against Chicago.

— Associated Press —

Vargas wins 18th as Royals defeat Tigers in series opener

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jason Vargas tied for the major league lead with his 18th victory, lifting the Kansas City Royals over the struggling Detroit Tigers 2-1 on Tuesday night.

Vargas (18-10) went six innings to match Cleveland’s Corey Kluber and the Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw for most wins in the majors. He gave up a run and five hits, inducing groundball double plays in the second, fourth and fifth innings.

In his first two starts against Detroit, Vargas was 0-2 while allowing 13 runs, including four home runs, in 4 2/3 innings. Vargas had Tommy John surgery in 2015 and only made three starts last year, but he’s now the first Royals pitcher to win 18 games since Kevin Appier in 1993.

The Tigers have lost eight straight and dropped to 4-21 in September. Anibal Sanchez (3-6) allowed two runs in six innings.

Mike Minor got his third save.

— Associated Press —

Royals give up four HRs in 11-3 loss to Yankees

NEW YORK (AP) — Aaron Judge circled the bases for the 50th time this season , breaking Mark McGwire’s major league record for home runs by a rookie, and returned to the Yankees dugout to exchange handshakes, hugs and high-fives with excited teammates.

And then, he walked up the steps and back onto the field.

Embarrassed by the attention, he managed four short waves with his right hand before heading back to the bench just three seconds later.

“They kind of told me: `You got to go out there. You got to go out there,” he would later recall. “First curtain call. I hope it was a good one.”

Judge had his second straight two-homer game in an 11-3 rout of Kansas City on Monday. On an unseasonably warm autumn afternoon, the Yankees won for the 16th time in 22 games during a playoff push that earned no worse than a wild card.

The 6-foot-7, 25-year-old slugger tied McGwire’s 1987 mark with a two-run drive to right-center off Jakob Junis (8-3) in the third inning that put New York ahead 3-0, driving a 93 mph high fastball 389 feet about a half-dozen rows into the right field seats.

Judge pulled a hanging changeup 408 feet for a parabolic solo shot that bounced into the left-center bleachers against Trevor Cahill in the seventh for a 7-3 lead. It was his fourth multihomer game this month and seventh this year.

He was hitting .329 with 30 homers and 66 RBI when he won the All-Star Home Run Derby.

“The way he started, I thought he was going to hit 60, 70,” Yankees catcher Gary Sanchez said through a translator.

But as if zapped by Kryptonite, Judge slumped to a .179 average with seven homers and 16 RBI from the start of the second half through Aug. 31, a whiff-a-thon that included 67 strikeouts in 44 games.

“I saw frustration,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. “I didn’t see him getting down. I never saw him stop working. I never saw him not believe in himself.”

Judge revived to hit .307 with 13 homers and 26 RBI in a stunning September, leaving him with a .283 average, 108 RBI, an AL-leading 120 walks and a big league-high 203 strikeouts.

“Everybody’s going say, oh, the strikeouts. But I think if I’m an owner of a GM, I’ll take 300 strikeouts with the year he’s putting up,” Yankees third baseman Todd Frazier said.

Judge has homered against every AL opponent and his total is second in the majors to the 57 of Miami’s Giancarlo Stanton. Judge is a contender for AL MVP , along with Houston’s Jose Altuve and Cleveland’s Jose Ramirez.

“I’d rather be in a good position in the playoffs and holding up a World Series trophy than an AL MVP trophy,” Judge said.

Boston’s Fred Lynn in 1975 and Seattle’s Ichiro Suzuki in 2001 are the only winners of the rookie and MVP awards in the same year.

“We can honestly say that we’re in this spot because of him,” CC Sabathia said. “I think that’s what an MVP is.”

Judge has 90-degree power, pulling 22 homers to left, hitting 13 to center and sending 15 opposite-field shots to right, according to MLB’s Statcast. His teammates never let him get down during the big slump.

“They kept pushing me, kept motivating me: `Hey, man, you’re going to get out of this. It’s baseball. Keep doing your thing,” he remembered, speaking after the game in a pinstriped thumbs-down T-shirt.

After striking out 42 times in 84 at-bats during last year’s late-season call-up, Judge didn’t even know he had won the right field job until three days before the Yankees’ opener.

“He’s handled it with grace and humility, and he’s never lost who he is and his ability to change someone’s day,” Girardi said. “He’s a natural-born leader for me. … It’s almost like he’s a big brother. He watches out over everyone. He waits for the players to come off the field. You got the whole package.”

Greg Bird added a two-run homer in the sixth , his seventh home run this season and fourth in nine games. Sanchez followed Judge in the seventh with back-to-back homers for the third time this year , raising his total to 33.

Sabathia (13-5) took a 6-0 lead into the seventh , when Salvador Perez hit a two-run homer and Mike Moustakas chased him by going deep four pitches later. Sabathia improved to 9-0 in 11 starts this year after Yankees’ losses and 21-11 in his career against Kansas City. He allowed six hits in six-plus innings, tying Yankees great Whitey Ford with 236 wins.

New York began the day five games behind AL East-leading Boston and needs one win or a Minnesota loss to clinch home field in the AL wild-card game on Oct. 3.

Kansas City trails the Twins by six games with six games left and headed to its final homestand before Eric Hosmer, Alcides Escobar, Lorenzo Cain and Moustakas can become free agents.

“I haven’t really thought about it too much yet,” Moustakas said. “I think it will settle in when we get to the field.”

Judge got both home-run balls back and probably will give them to his parents. He joked about Sanchez following his record-setter with a long ball.

“Maybe I should do that after every at-bat,” Judge said with a smirk, “just do a little quick curtain call before Gary hits.”

CENTURY MARK?

Yankees leadoff hitter Brett Gardner scored three times and has 94 runs, three shy of his career high. Girardi challenged him during spring training to reach 100.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Yankees: OF Aaron Hicks (oblique) had six at-bats in a simulated game at New York’s minor league complex.

UP NEXT

Royals: LHP Jason Vargas (17-10) starts Tuesday’s homestand opener against Detroit and RHP Jordan Zimmermann (8-13).

Yankees: LHP Jordan Montgomery (8-7) start Tuesday against Tampa Bay, which lines up RHP Luis Severino (13-6) to pitch Wednesday and in the wild-card game.

— Associated Press —

Chiefs move to 3-0 with 24-10 win at Chargers

CARSON, Calif. (AP) — Alex Smith threw two touchdown passes in the first 9 1/2 minutes against what used to be his hometown team, Terrance Mitchell had two interceptions and rookie Kareem Hunt scored on a 69-yard run to seal the Kansas City Chiefs’ 24-10 victory over the Los Angeles Chargers on Sunday.

The Chiefs (3-0) beat the Chargers for the seventh straight time and have won 12 straight AFC West games. Los Angeles’ Philip Rivers threw three interceptions and the Chargers fell to 0-3 in their first season playing in the 27,000-seat StubHub Center after moving from San Diego.

After a quick start, the Chiefs held on through a defensive struggle in the second half. They got two huge plays in the closing minutes: Justin Houston’s sack of Rivers and then Hunt’s sensational run when he cut back against the flow and raced 69 yards down the left sideline with 1:49 left. The rookie finished with 172 yards on 17 carries.

The game couldn’t have started more differently for Smith, who grew up in the San Diego area, and Rivers.

Rivers was intercepted by Mitchell on the game’s third play from scrimmage. Four plays later, Smith hit Tyreek Hill on a 30-yard touchdown pass.

Rivers moved the Chargers into Chiefs territory before Marcus Peters intercepted a pass intended for tight end Antonio Gates and returned it 38 yards to the Los Angeles 34. Four plays later, Smith threw a shovel pass to Albert Wilson for a 14-0 lead.

The Chargers got it together and drove for Melvin Gordon’s 11-yard scoring scamper to cut it to 14-7. Rivers floated a 44-yarder to Travis Benjamin for the drive’s big gain.

After the Chargers forced a three-and-out, Rivers threw his third interception, when Mitchell leaped in front of Tyrell Williams for the pickoff.

The Chargers’ defense began playing better. The Chiefs moved to the Los Angeles 25 before Smith was sacked on consecutive plays, first by Melvin Ingram and then by Joey Bosa and Corey Liuget. Cairos Santos missed a 51-yard field goal, but Rayshawn Jenkins was whistled for roughing the kicker, giving the Chiefs the ball on the 18. The drive fizzled and Santos kicked a 34-yarder to make it 17-7.

Chargers rookie Younghoe Koo kicked a 29-yard field goal as the clock expired to cut the lead to 17-10 at halftime. A week earlier, Koo missed a 44-yard attempt as time expired that would have given the Chargers a win against the Miami Dolphins in their home opener. In the season opener, Koo had a potential game-tying, 44-yarder blocked at Denver and the Broncos won 24-21.

RIVERS’ AIR WOES

It was the ninth time Rivers threw three interceptions. He led the NFL in pickoffs twice in the last three seasons, including last year when he had a career-high 21. Peters almost had another interception in the third quarter but the ball bounced off his hands. Daniel Sorensen appeared to come up with a deflected pass in the fourth quarter but video review showed it touched the ground first.

INGRAM & BOSA

Ingram had a career-high three sacks and Bosa had a half sack for the Chargers, who need big seasons from the pass-rushing duo.

ANTHEM

With widespread rebuke around the league toward President Donald Trump for his obscene criticism of the kneeling by players during the national anthem in protest of social injustice, five Chargers either knelt or sat during the national anthem. Many of their teammates linked arms and stood. About 10 Chiefs sat.

INJURIES

Chargers: Gordon injured his knee late in the second quarter. He returned in the fourth quarter.

UP NEXT

Chiefs: Return home to host the Washington Redskins a week from Monday night.

Chargers: Host the Philadelphia Eagles next Sunday.

— Associated Press —

Royals drop series finale at Chicago Sunday

CHICAGO (AP) — Lucas Giolito has been billed as a big part of the rebuilding plan for the Chicago White Sox.

He’s starting to live up to expectations.

The rookie right-hander pitched seven strong innings and Avisail Garcia drove in three runs with his 18th homer and a double to lead the Chicago White Sox past the fading Kansas City Royals 8-1 on Sunday.

Kevan Smith had a solo homer and a single for two RBI as Chicago took two of three from the Royals and dropped them 5 1/2 games behind Minnesota for the second AL wild card. Kansas City has seven games left.

The 23-year-old Giolito (3-3) allowed five hits while striking out five and walking none in his 11th major league start. Acquired from Washington with two other top pitching prospects last December, the 6-foot-6 Giolito has given up just four runs over 20 innings in his last three outings.

He thinks he can keep it up.

“I’d say that just the confidence and everything is right where it needs to be, so I’m going to continue to try and pitch like I am,” Giolito said. “I trust my stuff. I trust my pitches.”

Chicago manager Rick Renteria has been impressed, even if he isn’t ready to pencil in Giolito at the top of the rotation for next season.

“We’re really happy with the way he’s progressed,” Renteria said. “Obviously, he attacks the strike zone.

“I think it was a 2-to-1 ratio of strikes today, something like that. He gets after it.”

Lorenzo Cain’s homer on a high curveball in the fourth was the only run off Giolito, who threw 65 of 98 pitches for strikes.

Royals starter Ian Kennedy (4-13) allowed five runs in 5 1/3 innings as he lost his seventh straight decision. The right-hander hasn’t won since July 26 at Detroit.

“When you hear the score, didn’t reflect what the stat line shows,” Kennedy said. “I felt better than the results.”

Manager Ned Yost agreed, even if the Royals’ playoff hopes were all but dashed.

“I felt like (Kennedy) was much, much better,” Yost said, “but we just couldn’t generate any offense off Giolito.”

Chicago’s Tim Anderson singled twice to extend his career-high hitting streak to 15 games.

Garcia hit a two-run shot to right-center in the first to give Chicago a 2-0 lead.

Cain led off the fourth a drive into the bullpen in left to cut it to 2-1, but Smith lofted a solo shot in the bottom half.

Yolmer Sanchez doubled home Adam Engel in the fifth to make it 4-1. Smith singled in Anderson from second in the sixth.

The White Sox broke it open with three runs in the seventh. Garcia’s double to the corner in right drove in the first one. Mike Moustakas’ error at third base allowed two more to score.

GOOD NUMBERS

Garcia shed 18 pounds heading into this season and his offensive stats continue to reach new highs. The 26-year-old right fielder boosted his career-best totals to 18 homers and 80 RBI. He’s batting .331.

FIVE AND COUNTING

Kennedy rejoined the team Saturday after being away for the birth of his fifth child, Isaac. He is the first boy for Kennedy and his wife, Allison.

TRAINER’S ROOM

White Sox 1B/DH Jose Abreu didn’t start due to sore a left shin and is day to day. The slugger was the DH on Saturday when he drove in two runs to reach the 100-RBI mark for the fourth straight season. Abreu is just the third major leaguer to begin his career with four straight seasons of at least 25 homers and 100 RBI, joining Joe DiMaggio and Albert Pujols.

UP NEXT

Royals: Rookie RHP Jakob Junis (8-2, 4.05 ERA) faces Yankees LHP CC Sabathia (12-5, 3.81) in New York for an afternoon game that’s a makeup of a May 25 rainout. The Royals return to Kansas City to open a three-game series with Detroit on Tuesday.

White Sox: RHP James Shields (4-7, 5.40) starts Monday night against Angels righty Ricky Nolasco (6-14, 5.06) to begin a four-game series.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals stumble again with 4-1 loss to Pirates

PITTSBURGH (AP) — The St. Louis Cardinals are running out of time to make their September surge extend their season beyond the first day of October.

Seung Hwan Oh’s difficult season hit another low point when he surrendered a go-ahead two-run homer to Pittsburgh’s Starling Marte in the fifth inning on Sunday as the Pirates pulled away for a 4-1 victory to blunt the Cardinals’ momentum heading into the regular season’s final week.

St. Louis dropped 2 1/2 games behind Colorado for the NL’s second wild card, mustering just four hits against Jameson Taillon and five relievers while falling to Pittsburgh for the second time in less than 24 hours. The Cardinals headed home for a seven-game homestand starting on Monday against the Chicago Cubs with little wiggle room left.

“Yeah we understand the urgency,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. “We understand all the numbers. We just don’t spend too much time on them because they’re irrelevant to what we have to do. What we have to do is go play good baseball, that’s it.”

The Cardinals came into Pittsburgh riding a sweep of Cincinnati. They leave having dropped two of three to the Pirates. On Saturday night Pittsburgh chased Lance Lynn in the first inning of an 11-6 romp. On Sunday the Pirates relied on five strong innings from Taillon (8-7) and pounced when Oh (1-6) ran into trouble in the fifth.

With the score 1-1, Pat Bostick singled against Oh leading off the inning and Starling Marte followed with his seventh home run. The drive was the 10th allowed by Oh this season in 62 appearances. He gave up just five in 76 games a rookie in 2016.

“Obviously, everyone can see how it is, very tough,” Oh said through a translator. “None of the fastballs or off-speed pitches are working well.”

Jordan Luplow went deep an inning later off Brett Cecil to give Pittsburgh a three-run cushion. Taillon labored at times through his final home start of the season and needed 95 pitches to get 15 outs. He kept the Cardinals in check and five pitchers combined for hitless relief, with Felipe Rivero striking out two in a perfect ninth for his 19th save in 21 chances.

“The command was a little off, but he made pitches at crunch time throughout the game,” Hurdle said of Taillon. “His competitive fire was burning.”

Matt Carpenter hit his 22nd home run for St. Louis but the Cardinals went 0 for 6 with runners in scoring position and left eight men on base. St. Louis had a chance to close the gap in the seventh, loading the bases with two outs. Pittsburgh reliever George Kontos got Tommy Pham to hit into a forceout to end the threat.

“We were getting two outs, men in scoring position, bases loaded,” Matheny said. “Someone’s got to come through and do something really big and it didn’t happen. It’s not easy to do.”

FINISHING KICK

Taillon’s first full season in the majors included a battle with testicular cancer that forced him to miss more than a month. He’s endured an uneven year on the mound and has only worked into the seventh three times since returning from the disabled list in June. Still, the 25-year-old lowered his ERA this month to 3.91 in four starts.

“That was my goal I committed to in September, specifically after that little layoff I had,” Taillon said. “I really wanted to finish strong, so it felt strong to have a good one.”

Pirates manager Clint Hurdle praised Taillon’s mettle in the fifth, when Taillon battled through a pair of one-out singles to strike out Carpenter and Pham.

“He showed the guys in the dugout something,” Hurdle said. “I think he threw one fastball at 97. He threw some curveballs that were sharp even though the pitches were over 30. To see that fight, he had good stuff today. The command was a little off, but he made pitches at crunch time throughout the game. His competitive fire was burning.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: 1B Jose Martinez is dealing with a sprained left thumb and a timetable for his return is uncertain. Martinez had an MRI in St. Louis on Saturday that revealed no serious damage. Martinez flew to St. Louis after leaving Friday night’s win against the Pirates in the sixth inning due to pain in the thumb.

Pirates: SS Jordy Mercer was held out of the lineup after exiting Saturday night’s victory with soreness in his left knee.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Luke Weaver (7-1, 2.05 ERA) starts Monday against the Cubs and LHP Jon Lester (11-8, 4.56). St. Louis is 4-11 against Chicago this season.

Pirates: RHP Trevor Williams (6-9, 4.18) starts Tuesday versus Baltimore and RHP Kevin Gausman (11-10, 4.61).

— Associated Press —

Royals maintain wild card hopes with 8-2 win over White Sox

CHICAGO (AP) – Kansas City has eight games left and almost no margin for error.

Alex Gordon homered, Whit Merrifield drove in three runs and Danny Duffy pitched into the seventh inning to lead the Royals over the Chicago White Sox 8-2 on Saturday night, keeping Kansas City’s slim playoff hopes alive.

Salvador Perez went 2 for 4 with a pair of run-scoring doubles.

Kansas City is 4 1/2 games behind Minnesota for the second AL wild card, tied with the Los Angeles Angels and Texas.

”We just got to win,” manager Ned Yost said. ”We just have to keep playing good, find ways to win ballgames and play it out to the end.”

Minnesota has three games at AL power Cleveland in a series that starts Tuesday.

”Crazier things have happened in this game,” Duffy said. ”We just want to continue to try and finish strong and worry about next year when next year comes.”

Duffy (9-9) allowed two runs and eight hits in six-plus innings for his first win since Aug. 22.

Jose Abreu went 1 for 4 and drove in two runs to reach the 100-RBI mark for the fourth straight season. The Chicago slugger is just the third major leaguer to begin his career with four straight seasons of at least 25 homers and 100 RBIs after Joe DiMaggio and Albert Pujols.

”Honestly, I don’t feel as happy as I want to because we lost,” Abreu said through a translator. ”But personally, it feels good to get this goal accomplished.”

Tim Anderson went 1 for 4 to extend his career-best hitting streak to 14 games.

Dylan Covey (0-7) allowed three runs and five hits in six innings. He is seeking his first major league win after 11 starts and six relief appearances.

”I felt like I was maybe pitching from behind in counts too much,” Covey said, ”but there were a lot of positive things, too, to carry over into my next start.”

Chicago took the lead on Abreu’s RBI single in the first.

Covey allowed just one hit over the first three innings and retired the first two batters in the fourth. But then Eric Hosmer walked, Salvador Perez followed with an RBI double and Mike Moustakas singled to drive in Perez for a 2-1 Kansas City lead.

Gordon homered in the fifth. Merrifield’s three-run double in the seventh gave the Royals a 6-1 advantage.

Abreu drove in a run with a groundout in the seventh. Kansas City added a pair in the eighth on RBI doubles by Perez and Brandon Moss.

CHOICE COMPANY

DiMaggio is in the Hall of Fame and Pujols is on track for first-ballot election. Abreu felt honored to join a select group.

”I know a few things about DiMaggio,” Abreu said through a translator. ”I went to the video room and they were showing some videos about DiMaggio. Every time that your name is around two of the greatest people in baseball, you have to feel good because it means that you have done something special.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Perez returned after leaving Friday’s game with a sore neck after being struck by a foul tip. He was taken out in the middle of the eighth with the big lead.

White Sox: Abreu was the DH because he’s dealing with a sore left shin. … There’s still no diagnosis for LHP Carlos Rodon beyond shoulder inflammation, but the team is optimistic he’ll be able to go through a normal offseason program and be ready for spring training.

UP NEXT

Chicago RHP Lucas Giolito (2-3, 2.58 ERA) faces RHP Ian Kennedy (4-12, 5.39) in the series finale on Sunday. Giolito is 1-2 with a 2.49 ERA in his last four starts. Kennedy rejoined the team on Saturday after being away for the birth of his fifth child.

— Associated Press —

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