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Royals sign four undrafted free agents

Royals Media Relations

The Kansas City Royals announced today that the club has signed four non-drafted free agents.  The Royals have now inked 10 non-drafted free agents since the First-Year Player Draft concluded earlier this month.

Corey Hall, 23, was 4-7 with a 3.26 ERA in 15 starts at Santa Clara University in 2011.  The 6-foot-2 right-handed pitcher is a native of Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada.  The 22-year-old Steve Brooks is a 6-foot, 200-pound outfielder from Wake Forest University who stole 30 stolen bases in 33 attempts in 56 starts in 2011.  Justin Fradejas is a 22-year-old outfielder from Auburn University who hit .316 with 11 doubles in 57 games, including 56 starts.  The 6-foot-1, 190-pound right-handed hitter was a 35th-round pick by the Colorado Rockies in 2010, but chose to return for his senior season.  Derek Hamblen, 22, played infield and outfield for Belmont University in 2011, hitting .309 with 11 home runs and 36 RBI in 64 starts.

Kansas City wins series finale against Cubs

Associated Press

It was a bad time for the Cubs to face Kansas City right-hander Luke Hochevar. It was an afternoon start and Hochevar excels in day games.

Hochevar won again under the sun and Alex Gordon extended his hitting streak to 13 games with an RBI double in a four-run first inning as the Royals beat Chicago 6-3 on Sunday.

Hochevar is 9-3 with a 4.43 ERA in 14 day starts the past two seasons, compared to 2-11 with a 5.28 ERA in 21 appearances at night. He picked up just his second victory in his last 10 starts, with both coming in afternoon games.

“I don’t pay attention to that stuff,” Hochevar said. “Whether it’s day or night, I’ve got to go out and do exactly the same thing. I don’t get into that. I’ve pitched good in day. I’ve pitched good at night. It doesn’t matter.”

Hochevar (5-8) departed after 5 2/3 innings. He gave up three runs on seven hits while walking three and striking out five. Louis Coleman struck out D.J. LeMahieu to end the sixth with the bases loaded.

The six runs were the most the Royals have scored since June 14 when they won 7-4 at Oakland. The Royals banged out 13 hits, with every starter having at least one except Mike Moustakas.

“When you get a lead like that, you can’t let them inch back in,” Hochevar said. “That’s what I was trying to do, keep them back in that corner and not let them try to wiggle their way out. It was really big for our offense to come in and pick me up early and put six on the board.”

The Royals started with their first six batters reaching in the first. Melky Cabrera led off with a bunt single and stopped at second on Eric Hosmer’s single. Billy Butler delivered an RBI single. Gordon’s double scored Hosmer before Jeff Francoeur, who had three hits, added a run-scoring single.

After Moustakas walked, Matt Treanor’s sacrifice fly scored Gordon.

“We wanted to come out and set the tone like we did,” Gordon said. “To get four runs, especially for Hoch, he can go out and relax. He pitched a good game.”

Randy Wells (1-2), who gave up just five hits over six innings in his previous start, has not won since April 4. After a shaky start in which manager Mike Quade had Rodrigo Lopez warming up in the bullpen in the first, Wells lasted six-plus innings, allowing six runs and 10 hits.

“It was just bad pitching on my part,” Wells said. “I didn’t make the adjustment and got us into a 4-0 hole. The four in the first happened so fast. I’m pretty embarrassed about it.”

The Cubs trimmed their deficit to 4-3. Geovany Soto, who went 3 for 3 and walked, led off the third with a home run, his second in two games. In a two-run fourth, Reed Johnson doubled with two outs and scored on Blake DeWitt’s single. Soto’s double scored DeWitt.

The Royals padded their lead with two runs in the fourth. Chris Getz and Hosmer each had an RBI single.

“The tack-on runs to get us back to a three-run lead was big,” Royals manager Ned Yost. “The two runs in the fourth were huge. It kind of took the momentum away from them. It was key to have a little breathing room after the score got back to 4-3.The first six guys in our lineup reached base, but to Wells’ credit, he settled down and got them deep into the game.”

Joakim Soria worked the ninth for his 13th save in 18 opportunities.

Cubs shortstop Starlin Castro singled in the first to extend his hitting streak to a career-high 10 games. He ranks second in the National League with 104 hits.

Royals break six-game losing streak with win over Chicago

Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Chris Getz didn’t have to wait long to redeem himself.

Twenty-four hours after he botched a bouncer in the ninth inning that led to an unearned run in a loss, he drove in the go-ahead run with two outs in the eighth inning and the Royals beat the Chicago Cubs 3-2 Saturday night, snapping a season-high six game losing streak.

Getz’s grounder was deflected by pitcher Jeff Samardzija (5-4) to Cubs shortstop Starlin Castro, but his throw to first was late and Jeff Francoeur, who had walked, scored. Samardzija walked two and hit a batter and retired only one of the five batters he faced.

“Last night was kind of brutal with the small debacle in the eighth,” Getz said. “Well not small, it was huge. That’s the great thing about baseball; you come back the next day. I don’t have to wait a week. Show up the next day and you can do something to help the team. It just so happens I came up a situation I don’t want to say to make up for it, but certainly gives yourself a chance to win the game.”

Samardzija, an All-American wide receiver at Notre Dame, tried to barehand Getz’s hopper.

“I thought his hands were better,” Getz said and laughed.

Samardzija wished he hadn’t touched the ball.

“I just couldn’t stop myself,” he said. “I saw it coming and I thought I had a chance at it. In hindsight, if you have a great athlete like Castro back there at short, you got to take the odds that Castro is going to make that play. If I don’t hit it, he makes that play.”

Greg Holland (2-1) pitched a perfect eighth to pick up the victory. Joakim Soria struck out all three batters he faced in the ninth to log his 12th save in 17 opportunities.

While Getz has only seven extra-base hits and a .261 average, he is hitting .367 with runners in scoring position.

“Getz is really, really good in those situations, hitting better than .360 with runners in scoring position and finds a way to get them in,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “I’ve got a lot of trust in that situation in Getz. I knew we needed to get a run right there and get Soria in the game. I had all the confidence in the world that Chris would find a way to put the ball in play and make something good happen.”

The Royals jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the fifth when Eric Hosmer and Billy Butler stroked run-scoring singles. The Royals had a chance to add on with the bases loaded and one out, but Mitch Maier and Mike Moustakas had infield popouts to end the inning.

Aramis Ramirez and Geovany Soto hit back-to-back home runs in a span of four pitches by Danny Duffy in the top of the sixth to tie it at 2-2.

Duffy, a rookie left-hander making his ninth career start, worked a career-high seven innings, allowing two runs on nine hits, while striking out two, walking one and hitting a batter. Duffy struck out nine in 3 2/3 innings in his previous start at St. Louis before exiting with a cramp in his left leg.

“That was Duffy’s best game,” Yost said. “He was very efficient with his pitches. He spotted his fastball well, had great stuff. When they got the back-to-back homers that was the only little dent they put in him. He did a great job all the way around. He was throwing more strikes, getting quicker outs, he was throwing his breaking ball for strikes and actually had a pretty good changeup.”

Cubs starter Carlos Zambrano, who was facing the Royals for the first time in his career, gave up two runs on eight hits in seven innings, while walking three and striking out two.

The Cubs, who had four runners thrown out on the base paths Friday, had Reed Johnson cut down at the plate in the third, when he attempted to score from second on Jeff Baker’s single to left. It was Alex Gordon’s 12th assist, which leads all big league outfielders.

Gordon also singled to extend his hitting streak to 12 games, matching the second longest streak of his career.

Royals lose opener to Cubs as streak hits six

Associated Press

Tony Campana hit a disputed bunt single and scored the go-ahead run on an error in the ninth inning to help the Chicago Cubs beat the Kansas City Royals 6-4 on Friday night.

With one out, Campana popped up a bunt against Aaron Crow (2-1) that Royals third baseman Mike Moustakas appeared to catch at his shoetops. Plate umpire Jeff Kellogg ruled that it hit the grass and Campana was safe at first.

He went to third on D.J. LeMahieu’s single to right and came home when Kosuke Fukudome hit a bouncer that went off the glove of second baseman Chris Getz for an error. Starlin Castro added an RBI single that helped send the Royals to their sixth straight loss.

Sean Marshall (4-2) pitched a perfect eighth.

Royals skid continues as they get swept by Diamondbacks

Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Daniel Hudson pitched seven strong innings to win his ninth game and Miguel Montero and Juan Miranda each homered to lead the Arizona Diamondbacks to a 5-3 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Thursday night.

Hudson (9-5) is tied for the National League lead in victories. He is 8-1 with a 2.78 ERA in his past 11 starts after losing his first four starts. He held the Royals to three runs on six hits, while walking one and striking out one.

Montero led off the second with his ninth homer, while Miranda connected in the fourth.

Royals right-hander Felipe Paulino (0-1) retired 13 straight, striking out six, after Miranda’s home run before Stephen Drew singled to open the ninth. His eight-plus innings matched his longest outing. He allowed five runs on nine hits, one walk and eight strikeouts.

Two Royals prospects named to All-Star Futures Game

Royals Media Relations

Kansas City Royals prospects Kelvin Herrera and Wil Myers  today were named to the World and U.S. roster, respectively, for the 13th annual XM All-Star Futures Game.  The game will match the two squads and begin at 5 p.m. CDT on Sunday, July 10 from Chase Field in Phoenix, Ariz.  It will be televised live on ESPN2, ESPN2 HD and MLB.TV and also available on the radio at XM 89.

The 21-year-old Herrera opened the 2011 season with Wilmington (A Advanced) making eight relief appearances before joining Northwest Arkansas (AA) for 14 outings.  The 5-foot-10, 188-pound right hander is a combined 4-1 with a 1.27 ERA in 22 relief stints, allowing just five earned runs on 23 hits in 35.1 innings.  The resident of Tenares, Dominican Republic, who signed with the Royals as a non-drafted free agent on December 13, 2006, has struck out 40 and walked just three in his 35.1 innings.

Myers, 20, is the Royals third-round selection from the 2009 June Free Agent Draft.  The 6-foot-3, 205-pounder is spending his first season in the outfield after serving as a catcher during his first two pro seasons.  The right-handed hitter has batted .295 with nine doubles, three home runs, 14 RBI and 23 runs scored in 39 games for Northwest Arkansas in 2011, missing several games with a knee infection.  The native of Thomasville, N.C., was ranked by ESPN.com as the eighth-best prospect in baseball prior to the season.

Major League Baseball, in conjunction with the Major League Baseball Scouting Bureau, MLB.com, Baseball America and the 30 MLB teams selected the 25-man rosters for each club.  2011 will mark the second straight season the Royals have placed two players in the Futures Game.  Current Royals Eric Hosmer and Mike Moustakas represented the U.S. team in the 2010 contest, while Billy Butler and Alex Gordon did so in 2006.

Royals lose second straight to Arizona

Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Ian Kennedy pitched six strong innings and Xavier Nady hit an RBI double, helping the Arizona Diamondbacks beat the Kansas City Royals 3-2 Wednesday night.

Kennedy (8-2) allowed one run on eight hits, while striking out four and walking two to lower his ERA to 2.90. In his past 13 starts, he is 7-1 with a 2.16 ERA.

The NL West-leading Diamondbacks scored three runs on four hits in the fifth against Jeff Francis (3-8). Nady’s double down the left-field line scored Wily Mo Pena with the first run.

Willie Bloomquist, who played last year for the Royals, singled home Miguel Montero with the second run. Ryan Roberts’ sacrifice bunt scored Nady with the final run.

The Royals scored off Kennedy in the third inning when Chris Getz and Melky Cabrera singled. Getz came home when Eric Hosmer grounded into a double play.

Hosmer’s triple in the seventh off Micah Owings scored Getz, who had three hits.

J.J. Putz, who blew a lead in his previous opportunity, worked a scoreless ninth to pick up his 19th save in 22 opportunities. Getz had an infield single with two out in the ninth and stole second and third. After Putz walked Cabrera, he retired Hosmer on a popup.

The Royals outhit the Diamondbacks 11-5, but grounded into three double plays, went 1 for 9 with runners in scoring position and stranded nine runners.

Royals lose series opener against Arizona

Associated Press

Wily Mo Pena hit his first major league home run in nearly three years, Joe Saunders pitched seven strong innings and the Arizona Diamondbacks beat the Kansas City Royals 7-2 Tuesday night.

Pena, just promoted from Triple-A Reno where he topped the Pacific Coast League with 21 home runs, hit a towering shot to right-center with two out in the fifth to tie the score 1-1. Pena’s previous home run was June 24, 2008, while with the Washington Nationals.

Saunders (4-7), who started the season 0-5, picked up his fourth victory in six starts. He held the Royals to six hits and two runs over seven innings, his 10th consecutive start pitching at least six innings.

Chris Young padded the Diamondbacks’ lead with his 15th home run in the eighth after Stephen Drew walked.

Luke Hochevar (4-8) picked up the loss and is 1-5 in his past eight starts. Hochevar, the first pick in the 2006 draft, yielded five runs on eight hits. He struck out six and walked one in seven innings, with his earned run average climbing to 4.97.

The Diamondbacks scored three runs in the seventh. Gerardo Parra stroked a two-run triple to right and scored on Ryan Roberts’ ground out. The Diamondbacks took the lead in the sixth when Justin Upton’s double scored Kelly Johnson, who had a bunt single.

Alex Gordon led the Royals with three hits, needing only a single for the cycle, and drove in both runs. He led off the game with a home run and his triple in the seventh scored Alcides Escobar, who had walked.

Royals lose finale to Cardinals on Schumaker walk-off HR

Associated Press

Albert Pujols sprained his left wrist trying to make a tag at first base, but the St. Louis Cardinals recovered to beat the Kansas City Royals 5-4 Sunday on Skip Schumaker’s ninth-inning homer.

Pujols was injured in the sixth and the three-time NL MVP left the game. He will be evaluated further on Monday, an off day for St. Louis.

Wilson Betemit hit a chopper up the middle off Cardinals starter Jamie Garcia. Second baseman Pete Kozma backhanded the ball and made a jump-throw to first, pulling Pujols off the bag. As the slugger tried for a tag, Betemit ran into his glove hand and Pujols went down to the ground in pain.

Pujols, hitting .279 this year, was 3 for 3 with his 17th home run. The fifth-inning shot gave St. Louis a 3-2 lead.

Lance Berkman, who had been given a rest Sunday, replaced Pujols at first.

Leading off the ninth, Alcides Escobar hit his first home run on a 3-2 pitch from St. Louis reliever Fernando Salas, who threw 10 pitches in the at-bat. It was Escobar’s first homer in 325 at-bats and it tied the game at 4. It marked just the second blown save in 15 attempts for Salas (4-1).

After leadoff hitter Dan Descalso got thrown out trying to stretch a single, Schumaker connected off Tim Collins (3-4), the fifth Royals pitcher.

It was Schumaker’s second game-ending homer, the first coming in 2008, and his first home run since April 13.

Schumaker got his first RBI as a pinch-hitter this year, driving in Andrew Brown in the sixth to put St. Louis ahead 4-3.

Cardinals reliever Miguel Batista pitched out of a jam in the seventh with two on and no outs. After getting a flyout, Batista got Jeff Francoeur to sharply line out to Schumaker at second and Melky Cabrera was doubled off first.

Royals rookie left-hander Danny Duffy left in the fourth inning with cramps in his left calf. He struck out nine in 3 2/3 innings. He threw 90 pitches. Duffy allowed six hits and a walk.

Kansas City took a 1-0 lead in the first on an RBI double by Billy Butler, who was making his first start after pinch-hitting in the first two games of the series. Butler is the Royals’ designated hitter.

The Cardinals struck for two in the first when Brown, making his second major league start, hit a bases-loaded single.

The Royals tied it in the second on Alex Gordon’s two-out RBI single.

Kansas City tied it at 3 in the sixth when Escobar’s squeeze bunt scored Betemit.

Holliday’s home run lifts St. Louis past Kansas City

Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — Matt Holliday was determined to try anything to lift the St. Louis Cardinals out of their recent funk.

The home run worked best.

The outfielder, with high socks and a new pair of pants, hit a go-ahead two-run homer in the eighth inning that helped the Cardinals snap a season-high seven-game skid with a 5-4 win over the Kansas City Royals on Saturday.

Holliday and three others starters — Ryan Theriot, Skip Schumaker and Yadier Molina — wore their socks up near the knees in an effort to shake the bad luck. Holliday even changed uniform pants, wearing a tighter pair belonging to special assistant Red Schoendienst, a Hall Of Famer.

Now, Holliday is ready to move forward with the new look. “You can’t change after a win,” he said.

Holliday drilled an 0-1 pitch from reliever Greg Holland to erase a 4-3 deficit. Holliday is 5 for 9 with two homers and four RBIs since coming back from a quadriceps injury June 16.

“I thought timing might be an issue,” he said. “But I saw the ball pretty well.”

Holliday homered in his first at-bat in his return to the lineup Thursday. The home run Saturday, his eighth of the season, went 422 feet to dead center.

“It was huge,” St. Louis manager Tony La Russa said. “As big a hit as we’ve had all year.”

Kansas City, which won the first game of the series, has lost three of four.

Jason Motte (3-1) earned the win in relief. Closer Fernando Salas converted his 12th save in 13 chances.

Holland (1-1) gave up his first home run of the season.

“He was lights out except for one pitch,” said Kansas City manager Ned Yost. “He threw it right down the middle.”

The Cardinals were outscored 47-20 during the losing streak.

“You just keep battling and realize that it’s a long season and every team goes through something like this,” Holliday said.

Alex Gordon gave Kansas City a 4-3 lead with a solo homer in the seventh off St. Louis starter Jake Westbook, who gave up four runs in seven innings.

“I still felt strong,” Westbrook said. “Matty picked us up with a big homer.”

St. Louis took a 3-2 lead in the third on a run-scoring double by Albert Pujols, who has 52 RBIs against Kansas City.

Matt Treanor then tied the game 3-all with a solo homer in the fourth, his third of the season.

Kansas City starter Vin Mazzaro allowed seven hits and three runs over six innings.

Melky Cabrera robbed Lance Berkman of a home run with a leaping catch over the wall in the sixth inning.

The Cardinals improved to 5-23 when trailing after seven innings.

“We let one slip away,” said Yost.

Alcides Escobar had two hits for the Royals. He has 16 hits in his last 29 at bats.

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