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Royals beat A’s in AL wild-card thriller

By DAVE SKRETTA
AP Sports Writer

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Rain had started to fall at Kauffman Stadium as the echoing roars finally faded into the night. Eric Hosmer popped out of the dugout one last time, looked to the sky and let it soak in.

It had been 29 years since the Royals played a postseason game — nearly three decades spent mostly as a laughingstock. But on Tuesday night, already drenched in victory champagne, the young first baseman felt as if the whole world had watched their coming-out party.

“This team showed a lot of character tonight,” Hosmer said. “We weren’t going to quit.”

Salvador Perez singled home the winning run with two outs in the 12th inning, capping two late comebacks that gave Kansas City a thrilling 9-8 victory over the Oakland Athletics in the American League wild-card game.

Kansas City Royals
Kansas City Royals

Quite a start to October baseball — even if this one appeared to be over with plenty of time to spare in September. But in a back-and-forth epic that lasted 4 hours, 45 minutes, the A’s lost their seventh straight winner-take-all playoff game since 2000.

It was the final collapse in a season that looked so promising this summer.

“This will go down as the craziest game I’ve ever played,” said Hosmer, who sparked the final Royals rally with a one-out triple. “This team showed a lot of character. No one believed in us before the game. No one believed in us before the season.”

Making their first postseason appearance since winning the 1985 World Series, the Royals are sticking around. They’ll open their best-of-five Division Series on the road Thursday night against the AL West champion Los Angeles Angels.

After falling behind by four runs, the Royals raced back with their speed on the bases — they led the majors with 153 steals this season. Kansas City swiped seven in this one to tie a postseason record previously shared by the 1907 Chicago Cubs and 1975 Cincinnati Reds, according to STATS.

The biggest one came in the 12th.

Hosmer scored the tying run on a high chopper to third by rookie Christian Colon, who reached safely on the infield single and then stole second with two outs.

Christian Colon scores game winning run in 12th inning Tuesday in Royals 9-8 AL wildcard victory over Oakland (Photo: Kansas City Royals)
Christian Colon scores game winning run in 12th inning Tuesday in Royals 9-8 AL wildcard victory over Oakland (Photo: Kansas City Royals)

Perez, who was 0 for 5 after squandering two late chances to drive in key runs, reached out and pulled a hard one-hopper past diving third baseman Josh Donaldson. Colon scored easily, and the Royals rushed out of the dugout for a mad celebration.

Sitting upstairs in a suite, Royals Hall of Famer George Brett put his hands on his head in near disbelief at the frenzied and jubilant scene that was unfolding below.

“It was unbelievable,” Perez said.

The A’s raced out to a 7-3 lead by the sixth inning, but the Royals countered with three runs in the eighth. Nori Aoki’s sacrifice fly off Sean Doolittle in the ninth forced extra innings.

Kansas City squandered chances in the next couple of innings, as midnight came and went on the East Coast and the tension continued to build. Rookie left-hander Brandon Finnegan, just drafted in June, pitched two scoreless innings but walked Josh Reddick to start the 12th.

Pinch-hitter Alberto Callaspo delivered an RBI single off winning pitcher Jason Frasor to put the A’s ahead 8-7, but Hosmer hit a drive high off the left-center wall against loser Dan Otero for a triple in the bottom half.

Colon drove in Hosmer with a bouncer that barely traveled 50 feet. That set the stage for Perez, who lined a pitch from Jason Hammel down the third-base line.

“They finally got ahead there in the 30th inning or whatever it was,” said Brandon Moss, who drove in five runs with two homers for Oakland. “That was definitely the best baseball game I’ve ever been a part of.”

The long-downtrodden Royals hadn’t played in the postseason since beating St. Louis in the 1985 World Series, and the excitement that permeated the city might best be summed up by a statement posted by the Kansas City Police on Twitter in about the 10th inning: “We really need everyone to not commit crimes and drive safely right now. We’d like to hear the Royals clinch.”

For the A’s, it was a stunning and heartbreaking finish. They had the best record in baseball before wilting in the second half, and needed a victory on the final day of the regular season just to squeeze into the playoffs.

Oakland had chances to put all that in the past. Instead, the season ended abruptly for a team that has failed over and over again in the postseason.

“It’s kind of a microcosm of the year that we had,” Doolittle said.

A much-anticipated pitching showdown between Oakland ace Jon Lester and Kansas City counterpart James Shields instead turned into a high-scoring game and a battle of attrition between bullpens.

“It was absolutely epic,” Shields said. “You don’t write a story like that.”

Doolittle tried to save it for Oakland in the ninth, but he gave up a bloop single to pinch-hitter Josh Willingham. Pinch-runner Jarrod Dyson was sacrificed to second and then brashly stole third, allowing him to score on Aoki’s deep fly to right field.

It was the third time in the last three seasons that Doolittle has blown a postseason save.

“That’s the most incredible game I’ve ever been a part of,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “Our guys never quit. We fell behind there in the fifth inning, sixth inning. They kept battling back. They weren’t going to be denied. It was just a great game.”

UP NEXT

Yost hadn’t picked a starting pitcher for the opener against the Angels. The two best bets are vastly different options: Danny Duffy is a young, hard-throwing lefty who plays on passion, while Jeremy Guthrie is a cerebral right-hander who relies on guile.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Oakland C Geovany Soto left the game after hurting his left thumb tagging Hosmer at the plate to end the first inning.

POSTSEASON BLUES

The A’s haven’t won a playoff series since sweeping Minnesota in the 2006 ALDS. “We’ve had our ups and downs,” catcher Derek Norris said, “especially in the playoffs.”

Monarch boys and girls cross country teams win at Lyons

The TMP boys cross country team put all seven runners in the top 10 to win the Lyons Invitational Tuesday. The TMP girls’ put seven in the top 18 to also win the team title.

Andrew Hess led the TMP boys with a second-place finish (19:00.25), 40 seconds behind Smoky Valley’s Calvin Shannon. Mark Loftus was third (19:39.54) and Matt Mindrup fourth (19:54.30). Tony Staab came in sixth (20:08.63), Ricky Hockett seventh (20:10.79), Trevor Pfeifer ninth (20:35.74) and Ryan Ruder 10th (20:41.21).

Alicia Lechman led the TMP girls with a sixth place finish (17:43.42). Rachel Hamel was seventh (17:46.73), Shelby Stauffer eighth (17:47.67) and Julia Hess ninth (17:52.67).

FHSU women’s golf finishes 10th at own tournament

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State women’s golf finished 10th on its home course in the FHSU Invitational, the first mandatory MIAA event of the season. The Tigers shot 730 as a team. Central Oklahoma won the tournament with a 611 at Smoky Hill Country Club, a par-71 layout.

Abby Schmidtberger led the way for Fort Hays State, carding two rounds of 88. She finished in a tie for 38th individually. Samantha Hobson shot rounds of 87 and 91 to tie for 41st overall. Quillen Eichhorn finished 51st with rounds of 91 and 96. Megan DeWerff had rounds of 93 and 96, finishing one spot behind Eichhorn in 52nd. Hadley Tharp tied for 57th with scores of 105 and 96. Sage Alquist played as an individual and shot two rounds of 103. The Tigers finished eighth out of the 10 MIAA teams competing, but there were also two non-MIAA teams in the tournament.

Central Oklahoma won the event by 21 strokes over Northeastern State (632). Lindenwood was third with 636. Lindsey Bensch of Central Oklahoma, the medalist for the tournament, was tied for fourth, four strokes back of the lead entering the final round. By carding a 1-over par 72, she jumped teammate Marla Souvannasing for the top spot after Souvannasing shot 78 on the second day following a first day 72. Bensch competed in the tournament as an individual, so she did not figure into the team scoring for Central Oklahoma. Had she competed among the five team scorers, Central Oklahoma would have shot 12 strokes better and would have won by 33.

Next week, the Tigers head to Oklahoma City for the RCB Bank Classic, hosted by Central Oklahoma.

FHSU men’s soccer re-enters national rankings at No. 25

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State Men’s Soccer re-entered the NSCAA National Poll at No. 25 this week after a strong weekend of play.  The Tigers defeated Lindenwood 8-0 on Thursday before closing out the weekend with a 5-0 victory against Southwest Baptist.
 
FHSU dropped out of the rankings last week, but have been ranked 23rd in three other releases of the poll.  The Tigers are joined in the latest poll by MIAA opponent Northeastern State, which rose one spot to No. 15. 
 
Fort Hays State travels to Canyon, Texas on Thursday (Oct. 2) for a matchup with West Texas A&M before returning to conference play at home on Saturday (Oct. 4) versus Harding.
 
Below is the complete NSCAA National Poll for Sept. 30…
 

1 Southern New Hampshire University 1 7-0-0
2 University Of Charleston 3 8-0-0
3 Saginaw Valley State University 2 6-0-1
4 Saint Leo University 6 4-0-2
5 Southern Connecticut State University 7 6-0-0
6 Limestone College 4 7-0-0
7 Seattle Pacific University 10 6-0-1
8 Regis University 14 6-1-0
9 Young Harris College 9 6-0-1
10 Quincy University 11 9-0-0
11 Lynn University 12 5-1-0
12 Metropolitan State University of Denver 8 6-1-0
13 Mercyhurst University 13 7-3-0
14 Cal Poly Pomona 22 7-0-1
15 Northeastern State University 16 5-2-0
16 Tiffin University 15 5-1-1
17 Notre Dame College 19 6-2-0
18 Midwestern State University 18 6-1-1
19 Merrimack College 17 5-1-1
20 Azusa Pacific University NR 3-1-1
21 University of Alabama-Huntsville NR 3-1-1
22 Francis Marion University NR 5-1-1
23 St. Edward’s University NR 5-2-1
24 University Of Tampa 21 5-1-1
25 Fort Hays State University NR 4-3-1

 
Also receiving votes: Ohio Dominican University (9), Lock Haven University (9), Concordia College (NY) (7), Lander University (4), West Chester University (4), Northwest Nazarene University (3), University Of South Carolina-Aiken (2)

FHSU’s Cole tabbed as MIAA men’s soccer Athlete of the Week

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State’s Michael Cole was named the MIAA Men’s Soccer Athlete of the Week, announced by the conference office Tuesday (Sept. 30).

Cole, a junior from Round Rock, Texas, played a key role in the Tigers two wins last week, scoring three times and adding an assist (team-high seven points) during just 101 minutes of playing time. In FHSU’s 8-0 win over Lindenwood, Cole scored twice and had an assist to lead the team. It was Cole’s first multi-goal game of the season, and second multi-goal game of his career. The forward closed out the weekend with a goal in FHSU’s 5-0 win against Southwest Baptist, scoring the first goal of the afternoon (and what proved to be the game-winner).

This is the second MIAA Athlete of the Week award for the Tigers this season, as Austin Clifton won the award on Sept. 16.

The Tigers return to action this Thursday (Oct. 2) on the road versus West Texas A&M.  Game time in Canyon, Texas is 3 p.m.

Hays High School’s Brady Werth verbally commits to FHSU

Another big commitment for head coach Mark Johnson and the Fort Hays State men’s basketball team has been announced. Hays High senior Brady Werth announced on Twitter Monday night that he’s going to be a Tiger next season.

Werth averaged 15.5 points and 6.5 rebounds per game last season and is the two-time Western Athletic Conference Player of the Year.

Werth joins Scott City’s Trey O’Neil as FHSU verbal commitments for next season.

Chiefs offense hums in rout of Patriots

By DAVE SKRETTA
AP Sports Writer

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – Perhaps the Kansas City Chiefs gave their neighbors across the parking lot a little bit of inspiration with their impassioned performance against New England.

Jamaal Charles returned from an ankle injury to score three touchdowns, Alex Smith threw for 248 yards and three scores, and the Chiefs routed the Patriots 41-14 on Monday night, getting the sports week off to a smashing start in Kansas City with the Royals preparing to open the baseball playoffs on Tuesday.

“To have back-to-back events like this, Monday night football and a home playoff game, yeah, it’s special,” Smith said. “Right next door to each other.”

Arrowhead Stadium, which was packed to the brim in red-clad Chiefs fans, is just a short walk from Kauffman Stadium, which will surely be packed with blue when the Royals end a 29-year playoff drought against the Oakland Athletics in the AL wild-card game.

Several members of the Royals even showed up for the Chiefs-Patriots game, including starting pitcher James Shields, drawing huge roars when they were shown on the big screens. And some of the Chiefs said they were thinking about returning the favor, including wide receiver Dwayne Bowe.

Regardless, the Chiefs will be able to spend Tuesday in a celebratory mood.

They held the Patriots’ Tom Brady to 159 yards passing and a touchdown, picking him off twice and returning one for a touchdown. Brady was also strip-sacked by Tamba Hali to set up a Chiefs field goal, capping off a miserable night for the two-time NFL MVP.

“It was just a bad performance by everybody,” Brady said. “We need to make sure we never have this feeling again. We’ve got to figure out what we have to do better.”

The Chiefs forced the Patriots to air it out by stuffing Shane Vereen and Stevan Ridley. And when Brady dropped back, their front seven ran roughshod over New England’s suspect offensive line.

It hardly helped the Patriots offense that it was trying to operate on the same night Chiefs fans were trying to reclaim the record for loudest outdoor sports venue. The record was set in the first half, when Guinness World Records noted a noise level of 142.2 decibels – breaking the mark of 137.6 that Seattle Seahawks fans set last season.

“My ears are still ringing,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said with a smile.

Kansas City had 303 yards of offense by halftime, the most against any Belichick-coached team in the first half of a game. That includes his years coaching in Cleveland.

“We just never got anything going. Nothing,” Patriots defensive tackle Vince Wilfork said. “They just executed. They executed perfectly. We were always out of the game, it seemed.”

Here are a few of the reasons why the Patriots were thumped so soundly:

RUN, RUN, RUN: Charles looked just fine on his sprained right ankle, running for 92 yards. He was spelled by Knile Davis, who added 107 yards on 16 carries. “We kept each other fresh,” Davis said. “When he went in, he did his thing. When I went in, I did my thing.”

TENSE MOMENT: Charles briefly went to the locker room after stumbling into the end zone on his third touchdown of the game. He appeared to grab his hamstring, and Reid said that he received an IV, indicating that he might have been cramping. “I feel sore,” Charles admitted afterward.

BRADY’S STRUGGLES: Brady is completing just 59 percent of his passes through his first four games, his worst rate since becoming the Patriots’ starter in 2001. He is also averaging less than 200 yards passing per game. “I wouldn’t say we’ve had a very productive four games to start, but hopefully we can learn from it and understand the things that we’re doing wrong,” he said. “There’s nobody going to dig us out of the hole. We’ve kind of created it for ourselves and we’re going to have to look each other in the eye and see what kind of commitment we’re willing to make.”

KELCE STARS: Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, who is quickly becoming one of Smith’s favorite targets, had eight catches for 93 yards and a touchdown. “We know what we can do on our offense and our defense,” Kelce said. “Our defense got a lot of turnovers today, and that was awesome to see.”

GAROPPOLO PLAYS: Rookie quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo got into the game in the fourth quarter for New England, when the outcome was already decided. He was 6 of 7 for 70 yards with a touchdown. “I am a relief pitcher, pretty much,” he said, “so that is my job.”

TMP girls’ golfers finish 3rd at Hoisington

The TMP-Marian girls’ golf team finishes third at the Hoisington Invitational. The Monarchs shot a 202 and finished one shot back of second place Hoisington and three behind first place Larned.

Karee Dinkel shot a 48 to lead the Monarchs with a fifth place finish. Pam Chen was eighth and Hannah Michaud 10th, both with a 51.

Tiger Talk with FHSU football coach Chris Brown (AUDIO)

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FHSU women’s golf 10th after first day of own tourney

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State women’s golf sits in 10th place after the first day (Sept. 29) of the FHSU Invitational, being held at Smoky Hill Country Club in Hays, a par-71 layout. A mandatory event for MIAA schools, all 10 teams from the conference and a pair of non-conference teams are competing at the event. The Tigers shot 359 as a team on the first day.

Central Oklahoma leads the way as a team, shooting 305 on day one. Marla Souvannasing of UCO leads as an individual after carding a 1-over par 72. One shot behind her is Alanna Haynes of Lindenwood, who shot 73, helping her team to second place in the standings six shots back of UCO. Central Oklahoma had four players shoot in the 70s (which includes one player competing as an individual), while Lindenwood (311) had three (one individual included) and Northeastern State (316) had two. Altogether, 10 players shot in the 70s in the opening round.

Leading Fort Hays State was Samantha Hobson, who carded 87. Abi Schmidtberger is one stroke back of her after an 88. Quillen Eichhorn shot 91, Megan DeWerff shot 93, and Hadley Tharp shot 105. Sage Alquist is competing as an individual and she shot 103.

A shotgun start at 9 am will be used once again on Tuesday for the final round.

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