January 27, 2012

Red Cross asking for donations, but not items … yet

The outpouring of help has been overwhelming to those affected by the tornado in Joplin. It’s also overwhelming volunteer coordinators, who are telling everyone to be patient.

There will be a need for relief items for Joplin’s tornado victims, but with many of them still without a home or even a place to stay outside of a shelter, that time hasn’t come yet. Joann Moore is with Red Cross Greater Ozarks Chapter.

Moore says the Red Cross and the United Way is collecting names of people who want to give their time and hard work, but that time hasn’t come either. She’s asking everyone to be patient, store material donations until later, and in a few days, people will be able to pitch in.

They need a place to live, first, she says.

The Ozarks Chapter is also stocked on blood donations and is not taking anymore. Moore doesn’t want to discourage people from donating at their local chapter, but she says they have enough for the people of Joplin.

The real need, she says, is for financial contributions.

To donate to the national organization, visit www.redcross.org; checks can be sent to the Ozarks chapter at 1545 North West Bypass, Springfield, MO, 65803; call 1-800-RED CROSS, or text 90999. Donors can also go to the Ozarks chapter’s website is www.redcross-ozarks.org and make a secure donation.

Royals Drop 5th Straight

Vladimir Guerrero’s run-scoring single in the bottom of the 12th inning lifted the Baltimore Orioles over Kansas City, 6-5, at Camden Yards. The Orioles were unable to score the winning run despite loading the bases with nobody out in the 11th, but came back to end it one inning later. Nolan Reimold went 4-for-4 with a pair of homers and drove in four runs for Baltimore, which swept a three-game series from Kansas City for the first time since May 28-30, 2007. The Orioles also extended their winning streak to a season-high five games. Jeremy Accardo (3-1), picked up the victory for tossing two perfect innings of relief. Melky Cabrera had a two-run single for the Royals, who have lost five in a row.

Mizzou Into Big 12 Baseball Semis

Sophomore infielder Eric Garcia tallied an RBI single in the bottom of the ninth inning as the Mizzou baseball team escaped with a 6-5 win over fourth-seeded Oklahoma State in the Big 12 Tournament on Thursday (May 26) at Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City. The win puts the Tigers into the semifinals of the Big 12 Tournament where they will face either Oklahoma State or Texas on Saturday at 9 a.m.

“I’m really proud of these guys, not just this weekend, but over the last five or six weeks. We’re looking forward to playing on Saturday,” head coach Tim Jamieson said. “We got a great effort from a lot of different people. We only swung the bats well in a couple different innings, but we’re fortunate that was enough.”

The Tigers carried a 5-0 lead into the eighth inning, but OSU scored three in the eighth and two more in the ninth to tie the score at 5-5, setting up the heroics in the ninth. The win for the Tigers improves them to 26-30 this season and it is their fifth walk-off win against Big 12 competition this season, the most by any team in the league. It is also the first walk-off win at the Big 12 Tournament since the championship game last season.

“We’ve had some great ninth-inning wins and extra-inning wins, and today is probably one of the biggest ones we’ve had all year just because we need to win this tournament,” Garcia said. “I feel like we’re riding our confidence right now.”

The win also keeps the Tigers from dropping to the losers’ bracket of the tournament as the winner of tomorrow’s elimination game will need to defeat the Tigers twice on Saturday in order to advance to the final.

Senior second baseman Andrew Thigpen led the Tigers at the plate on Thursday, going 3-4 with a run scored and it was his hit that started the ninth-inning rally for the Tigers. Leadoff hitter Conner Mach also had a nice day, going 3-5 with a pair of runs scored, including the game winner on Garcia’s single. Garcia went 1-3 with an RBI and a run scored and shortstop Jesse Santo had a huge two-run single in the fifth as he went 1-4 on the day. Blake Brown, Brannon Champagne and Ben Turner also added RBIs in the contest.

Senior lefty Phil McCormick earned his eighth win of the season after blowing the save in the ninth. His eight wins are the most by a Tiger this season. Freshman starter Rob Zastryzny got a tough no-decision on the day, going 7.0 innings while allowing two earned runs and striking out seven, just one off of his career high.

“My arm felt good, everything felt good. The mound was really nice for me; it wasn’t wet,” Zastryzny said following the game. “Ben (Turner) gave me a good target, coach (Matt) Hobbs threw some good pitches for me and I just executed them.”

The game started as a pitchers’ duel through the first four and a half innings as Zastryzny and OSU starter Brad Propst both pitched their way out of trouble early in the game. Zastryzny was sharp, keeping OSU scoreless heading into the bottom of the fifth inning.

That is when the Tigers finally got to Propst as Thigpen led off the inning with his second hit of the day. Mach followed that with a single back up the middle, putting runners on the corners with no one out. Champagne then knocked a single through the right side to score the game’s first run, putting the Tigers on top, 1-0. From there, Garcia bunted the runners to second and third, bringing up yesterday’s heroJonah Schmidt, who walked despite falling behind in the count.

With the bases loaded, Brown then drew a walk and Turner followed suit in the next at bat, giving Mizzou two more runs and making the score 3-0. Then Santo delivered the big blow of the inning. After OSU brought in Blake Barnes to pitch, Santo laced a single back up the middle to bring in two more runs, putting the Tigers on top, 5-0.

Following the Tigers’ big inning, Zastryzny continued to mow through the OSU order, throwing scoreless sixth and seventh innings. OSU finally got to him in the eighth as the first two runners reached base. He was then lifted in favor of Dusty Ross and on his first pitch, OSU first baseman Zach Johnson homered to cut into the lead at 5-3. But Ross retired the next three batters to send the Tigers to the bottom of the eighth with a two-run lead.

But McCormick, the Tiger closer, struggled in the ninth, loading the bases and then allowing a two-run single by Johnson to tie the game at 5-5. Garcia got the Tigers out of the inning on what looked to be a sure hit through the right side as he snared the ball to his left and flipped it to McCormick who was covering at first for the out, ending the threat and likely saving the go-ahead run.

That set up the heroics in the ninth. Thigpen led off the inning with his third hit of the day and Mach followed that with a single through the left side, also his third hit of the day. After Champagne failed to lay down a successful sacrifice bunt, Garcia came in and hit a seeing-eye single through the right side to score Mach from second. The walk-off hit for Garcia was his second of the season.

Mizzou will have the day off tomorrow before facing the winner of tomorrow’s elimination game between Texas and Oklahoma State on Saturday at 9 a.m.

 

Missouri State Falls to Jays; Title Game On Line Today

Missouri State lost leads of 2-0, 3-2 and 5-3 and was plagued by mistakes defensively from the fifth inning on Thursday, losing to Creighton 6-5 at the State Farm MVC Tournament at TD Ameritrade Park.

The Bluejays (42-14) survived their second elimination game of the day and forced a winner-take-all contest with the Bears (33-22) at 4 p.m. Friday for the right to play the Indiana State/Wichita State winner in the title game at 7 p.m. Saturday.

Aaron Conway led off the bottom of the first with a single and stole second to tie Dant’e Brinkley’s career stolen base record at 69 before Brent Seifert smacked a two-run double to put the Bears ahead 2-0.

Creighton took advantage of a bad hop in front of second base to score in the second and the Bears answered when a throwing error by CU third baseman Chance Ross allowed Spiker Helms to score for a 3-1 score.

The Bluejays tied the game again in the fifth, getting an RBI single from Gabriel Thibodeaux that included a throwing error from Helms in right to get two runs after loading the bases with nobody out.

The Bears again responded to regain a two-run lead, this time with another Seifert RBI double that ended starter Brandon Koenigstein’s day before Travis McComack knocked a sacrifice fly. Missouri State managed just two hits off three CU relievers for the remainder of the game.

Creighton cut the lead to 5-4 in the sixth, with Alex Staehely reaching on a strikeout in the dirt that Luke Voit threw down the right field line and eventually scoring on two more MSU errors on a potential 3-6-3 double play.

The Jays capitalized on yet another miscue in the seventh after Pierce Johnson’s inning-ending strikeout tipped off Voit’s glove and let Nick Judkins in from third.

Missouri State stranded runners on second and third in the seventh and Creighton took a 6-5 lead on a sacrifice fly caught in foul territory in the eighth.

Then in the ninth, Missouri State loaded the bases with one out, but Seifert popped out to first and McComack flied out to left as CU’s Kurt Spomer held on for his 12th save.

Johnson (6-5) fanned five against three hits and one earned run, while Clay Murphy struck out seven in 5.1 innings in a no decision.

 

Former Speaker Jetton pleads guilty to assault

Former House Speaker Rod Jetton has pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault, avoiding a trial on charges that he struck and choked a woman during an evening of rough sex at her home in Sikeston.

A trial had been scheduled for early June on charges brought against Jetton by Mary Elizabeth Lowe. Lowe charged that Jetton forced himself on her in Novebmer of 2009.

The Southeast Missourian reports Jetton pleaded guilty before Judge Fred Copeland this afternoon in a New Madrid court. Copeland placed Jetton on probation and ordered him to pay $950 in restitution to Lowe, who attended the court hearing. Jetton has also been ordered to pay the $300 court cost. Once those debts are paid, Jetton will be released from probation in accordance with the plea agreement.

Jetton, a Republican from Marble Hill, first won election to the House in 2000. He quickly rose through the ranks, elected first as Speaker Pro Tem by a Republican Caucus grateful for his relentless behind-the-scenes work that led to a Republican majority for the first time in decades. The House elected him Speaker during the 2005 legislative session. He served as Speaker for two terms, a total of four years.