Sports: Mizzou Chases a World Series Win; Cardinals get a win; Battlehawks Outbattled; and One Guy’s May 

By Bob Priddy, Missourinet Contributing Editor

(MIZ)—The University of Missouri softball team enters the NCAA post-season tournament as the overall seventh seed, earning a home field regional tournament slot. They’ll play thefourth-seeded University of Omaha Friday afternoon in Columbia.

Omaha is 41-13.  The Lady Tigers are 43-15 after losing the SEC championship to Florida.  Indiana, the number two seed, and Washington, seeded third, also will be playing in Columbia. It’s a double-elimination tournament.

If Missouri wins it will be the host team in the super regional round, facing the winner of the Durham Regional that includes South Carolina, Morgan State, Utah, and Duke, the tenth seed. (ZOU)

(BASEBALL)—A bad week for the Cardinals and what is becoming a typical week for the Royals.

(ROYALS)—The off-season moves by the Kansas City Royals continue to make the front office appear to be brilliant strategists and buyers as the season reaches the one-fourth mark.   The Royals finished their week eight games above .500 and only one-half game out of first place thanks to a sparkling 12-strikeout performance against the Angels on Mother’s Day by Seth Lugo.  Lugo lasted eight innings and gave up one earned run in a 4-2 Royals win. Seventy-seven of his 112 pitches were strikes as he kept the Angels off the scoreboard until the sixth inning.

Manager Matt Quatraro says getting a dozen strikeouts on only 112 pitchers was “really remarkable.”

His performance has made him the American League ERA leader at 1.66.

(CARDINALS)—If the Royals’ front office seems brilliant for its offseason moves, the Cardinals front office continues to draw scornful looks from fans and media observers for what it did.  And it appears President of Baseball Operations John Mozeliak knows he might be on even less firm ground that manager Oli Marmol. During an interview Sunday on the Cardinals’ flagship radion station, KMOX, Mozeliak said he understood fans are not happy with him or with Marmol. “I think we have to just keep trying to go back, trying to get this to work….We understand that if it doesn’t, people are going to be held accountable and ultimately that starts with me.”

A few hours later, the Cardinals finally beat the Brewers on Mother’s Day to close out the week eight games UNDER .500.  Ryan Helsley, who hadn’t pitched in eight days, got the save in a 4-3 Redbird win.  That ended an eight-game losing streak stretching to last year against the Brewers.

Paul Goldschmidt had a pair of hits, including a home run, to break a 1-for-34 streak.

Cardinals’ starter Miles Mikolas staggered through the first inning, giving up all three Brewers runs on 42 pitches, before settling down and needing only 53 more pitches to shut down Milwaukee through the next five innings.

The Cardinals have won only two of their last ten games.

0-0-0

The ‘Birds got some discouraging news about Willson Contreras’ broken arm during the weekend. It had been thought he’d be gone for about eight weeks but the new prognosis is for him to be missing for about ten.

He was the team’s leading hitter, with a .280 batting average when he went out. Backup Ivan Herrera is hitting .263.

(Battlehawks)—The St. Louis Battlehawks and the Birmingham Stallions went into their weekend game with combined records of 11-1, the Stallions having the unblemished record.

And they still do—but it was a nail-biter.

St. Louis got a team-record 61-yard field goal from Andrew Smyzt to stay within three of the Stallions at the half, and took a 20-17 lead into the fourth quarter—the first time all season Birmingham had trailed going into the last quarter. But Birminghan got the final score on a touchdown pass from Adrian Martinez to Kevin Austin Jr., with 5:23 left, the sixth lead change of the game.

The ‘Hawks, down 30-26, got the ball back on a blocked punt with 40 seconds left, 47 yards from the end zone. But they couldn’t finish a final drive and left for home with a 5-2 record, tied with the San Antonio Brahmas for the lead in the XFL Division. St. Louis, however, has a tie-breaker win in San Antonio.

Quarterback A. J. McCarron hobbled to the sidelines with an ankle injury late in the fourth quarter after taking a low and late hit. He returned to finish the game but was limping perceptibly.  Coach Anthony Becht told reporters yesterday that he doesn’t know yet if McCarron can play next weekend against the D. C. Defenders. He says McCarron will be evaluated day-to-day.

Speeding right along—

(IndyCar)—It’s May and that means racing at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Practice begins today for the Indianapolis 500 with 34 cars competing for the 33 starting spots in the race Memorial Day Weekend. Qualifying is set for next weekend.

But first, there was the traditional May-opening race on the road course.

Indianapolis, IN – during the INDYCAR Sonsio Grand Prix at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. (Photo by Joe Skibinski | IMS Photo)

Defending series champion Alex Palou started from the pole and raced to a 6.6-second win ahead of Will Power, going back-to-back in the May road course race.  But the race was far more intense than that, with eight drivers seeing the lead and fourteen lead changes—including the first lap when Christian Lundgaard, who started third, grabbed the lead from Palou early on the first lap.

Lundgard led 35 of the first 42 laps but was third at the end. Palou led the last 23 laps. Lundgard was third, ahead of Scott Dixon and Marcus Armstrong.

The win puts Palou into the points lead again, up twelve on Power who has three second-place finishes in four races this year.

It was a solid day for Chip Ganassi racing, whose cars finished first, fourth and fifth. Palou’s win is the third straight for Ganassi on the Indianapolis road course. Scott Dixon won the fall race last year.

Power had the best finish of the three Penske team drivers. Scott McLaughlin finished sixth after starting thirteenth and Josef Newgarden, who started fourth, fell back to seventeenth at the end.  Penske’s teams were short some personnel who have been suspended for the month’s races because of the push-to-pass controversy at St. Petersburg.

Colton Herta, who started the race as the points leader, had a difficult day, starting 24th because he ran out of gas while qualifying and then being bumped off the track by teammate Marcus Ericsson early in the race, dropped to fourth in the standings although he rallied back to seventh. Ericsson wound up sixteenth.

(Doing the Double)—The most closely watched driver in today’s two practice sessions (weather permitting) will be Kyle Larson, who will try to coordinate qualifying at Indianapolis next Saturday with the NASCAR All-Star Race that night at North Wilkesboro, North Carolina.

Larson hopes to run the full 500 and then fly to Charlotte for NASCAR’s annual Memorial Day 600 mile race that night.

Friday is the first day he’ll be challenged to wear two hats, or helmets.  IndyCar practice is scheduled for noon-6 p.m. Practice in Noth Wilkesboro for the All-Star Race is scheduled from 4-4:50 p.m. with qualifying going from 5:50-7 p.m. His team has lined up newly-retired Kevin Harvick to practice and qualify his car Friday night, if needed.

If Larson and his IndyCar team are satisfied on Friday with the way he’s running, he could leave Indianapois early enough to get to North Carolina.

Saturday is more complicated by the qualifying procedures at Indianapolis. Qualifying on Saturday starts at 11 a.m. and goes to 5:50 p.m.  Drivers can try to improve their starting position with additional qualifying runs. At some point, Larson and his team will have to decide when he will or or if he will go to North Wilkesboro for qualifying there.

Sunday will be another challenge.  If Larson is one of the twelve fastest qualifiers, he’ll be part of a shootout scheduled for 3:05-4:05 Sunday.  If he is one of the six fastest drivers in that contest, he’ll be part of a second shootout from 5:25-5:55 to determine who will start from the pole and the starting positions for the first two rows on race day.

The NASCAR All-Star Race starts at 8 p.m.  He should be able to make the start even if he’s part of the fast six shootout. Flight time, Indianapolis to North Wilkesboro is about an hour.

Then there’s race day.

(All of these times are Eastern Daylight Savings times, by the way.)

Hendrick Motorspots, his NASCAR team, has made it clear that Larson’s top priority on Memorial Day Sunday is the Charlotte 600-mile race that night.

If the Indianapolis 500 starts on time and has no serious interruptions, it should be over in plenty of time for Larson to make it to Charlotte for the 6 p.m. start of the NASCAR race.

But if the 500 start is delayed or if the race is interrupted by weather or on-track events that endanger his ability to start the race in Charlotte, he’ll park his McLaren car in Indianapolis and head east. He told reporters last weekend he’s not sure who will make the call but at a certain point, “I have to leave because the 600 is the priority and chasing another championship is the priority.”

Recently retired IndyCar driver Tony Kanaan is a standby driver for the 500 but he’ll only drive the McLaren entry if the start of the race is delayed long enough that Larson has to leave for Charlotte.

Kanaan cannot replace Larson in the car once the race has begun. IndyCar rules prohibit relief drivers. If Larson has to leave for Charlotte while the 500 is still underway, the car will be parked and he will be scored in the standings on the basis of the number of laps he ran.

The hope, of course, is that those race-day contingencies don’t need to be used and Kyle Larson will become the fifth driver to compete in both of those major races on th same day.  John Andretti was the first to try, in 1997.  Tony Stewart did it twice, 1999 and 2001. Robby Gordon tried The Double in 2002 and the next year, and Kurt Busch did it in 2014.

Nobody has won either of the races the year they did the double.  Tony Stewart was 9th in the 500 and 4th in the 500 in 1999 then was sixth in the 500 and third in the 600 in 2001; Kurt Busch was sixth in both races in 2014.

(NASCAR)—Brad Keselowski’s long dry spell is over.

Keselewski finally picked up his 36th NASCAR Cup victory at Darlington after 110 races without seeing victory lane. The win is the first for a Ford this year and his first win as a part-owner of Roush-Fenway-Keselowski Racing.

The race’s intensity, which would spill over into the pits after the checkered flag, picked up as Keselowsky, pole-winner Tyler Reddick, and Chris Buescher fought for the win during the last thirty laps.

Keselowski and Reddick raced each other door-to-door after the final restart on the 261st lap of the 293 lap race. Their heated battle allowed Buescher to get past both of them three laps later, shortly before Reddick was able to get ahead of Keselowski and start chasing down Buescher.

With nine laps left Reddick tried to go inside of Buescher but couldn’t hold his car low and took Buescher with him into the wall as he slid up the track.

That left the door open for Keselowski, who held off Ty Gibbs by 1.2 seconds at the end.

While Keselowski was celebrating on the track, Buescher was unloading on Reddick in the pits. “We got wrecked. That one’s clear as day. Don’t need any cameras to tell us,” he told Reddick. Reddick’s move, he said, “is just something you know isn’t going to work.”

Reddick readily admitted he fouled up. ““I I made a really aggressive move and was hoping I was going to clear him. When I realized I wasn’t going to, I tried to check up to not slide up into him, but, yeah, I wish I wouldn’t have done that. I completely understand why he is that mad. He did nothing wrong…Just trying to win the race, and to take myself out—that’s one thing—I can live with that, but just disappointed it played out the way that it did, and I took him out of the race as well.”

While one streak ended, another continued.  Denny Hamlin led one lap, his seventeenth race in a row in which he has led at least once.

(Photo Credits: MU; Joe Skibinski-IMS, Bob Priddy)

 

 

Let me know what you think......

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.