May 21, 2012

Cardinals can’t gain after extra inning loss

Former Astros star Lance Berkman doubled in Albert Pujols and Matt Holliday to tie the game at 4-4 in the eighth inning as the Cardinals rallied again, but they couldn’t push across another run as the Astros scored in the bottom of the tenth to take a 5-4 win in Houston Monday night.

Brian Bogusevic doubled off Octavio Dotel and advanced to third on a bunt. Then Bogusevic scored the winning run on Angel Sanchez’ bunt in front of the plate when Dotel couldn’t flip the ball out of his glove in time.

The Cardinals had opportunities but couldn’t take advantage of 12 hits and nine walks. Houston starter Wandy Rodriquez held the Cards to two runs on eight of those hits. The Astros got to Jaime Garcia four runs in just four innings.

St. Louis has won 15 of 20, while Atlanta has dropped 16 of their last 25 including a loss to Philly Monday. The Braves magic number to clinch is any combination of two wins or Card losses with two to play on the schedule.

Senate Committee to study Mamtek deal, new entity tries to salvage it (audio)

A failed economic development deal to bring hundreds of jobs to north central Missouri will be the subject of a Senate Committee investigation even as a new entity hopes to salvage it.

Senate Leader Rob Mayer has named Senator Kurt Schaefer to the Committee on Governmental Accountability and asked that body to investigate Mamtek. That’s the company that was to have opened a sucralose plant in Moberly and provided over 600 jobs. The Senate reports Mamtek received $37 million in bonds from the City of Moberly and had been promised more than $17.6 million in state tax incentives if certain requirements were met. No state money has gone to the project.

Senator Schaefer says the Committee will look at whether the Department of Economic Development is doing its due diligence before committing taxpayer dollars to economic development projects. It will begin work with an organizational meeting next week.

Meanwhile, a new entity has been formed that will attempt to complete the Mamtek project. American Sucralose Manufacturing includes some “key former principals of Mamtek,” according to a statement from Moberly’s Industrial Development Authority. It will deposit funds to restore the debt service reserve Mamtek used to make an August bond payment. The new company plans to “cure the deficiencies, and undertake completion of the project under City (of Moberly) supervision.”

Senator Schaefer wishes the new corporation well but says the Committee’s investigation must proceed in spite of the new effort to resume the project. He hopes the Committee’s work would not interfere with that attempt, but he says lawmakers’ greater responsibility is to taxpayers in Moberly and statewide.

He thinks the Mamtek failure raised flags in the upper chamber about the economic development bill because Senators thought it was being rushed through quickly, like the Mamtek deal. That sucralose plant package was put together in only 73 days.

The special session, meanwhile, is still underway. A few senators met in technical session on Monday and debate may resume on Thursday.

Listen to Mike Lear’s interview with Senator Kurt Schaefer mp3 8:33

Highway Patrol, state agencies offer free help installing child safety seats (AUDIO)

Several state agencies including the Highway Patrol wrapped up a week-long effort to make sure Missourians are properly using child safety seats in cars. Patrol Captain Tim Hull says it’s not that people aren’t using them, it’s that they need help learning how to install them in the car the right way.

Hull says many times the seats aren’t restrained properly or at all in the car. He says some of them aren’t angled evenly or don’t follow the correct seatbelt path in the car. He says area fire districts or highway patrol troop headquarters will offer help in learning to install them properly.

He says to remember that children under 2 need to be in a rear facing seat, from 2-4 can face forward in a car seat, and after that, if the child is less than 8 years old, or shorter than 4 foot 9 or less than 80 pounds, needs to be in a booster seat.

(AUDIO) Allison Blood reports on child safety seats Mp3 1:02

 

Fans pay Pujols respect…just in case (AUDIO)

A fan holds a sign for Albert Pujols to read during the last regular season home game. UPI/Bill Greenblatt

The moment was not lost on Cardinal fans. With a wild card berth hanging in the balance, the fans also realized that when Albert Pujols stepped up to the plate in the bottom of the eighth inning, it could be the last time they see Pujols in a Cardinals uniform.

“We’ve been treated to 11 years of the best baseball in the history of our game,” said Cardinals manager Tony La Russa. “Our fans know it. I just hope they get to see him again, not just in 2012, but this year.”

Albert Pujols talks about fan reaction (1:00)

Not to look too far ahead, but the Cardinals are in a pretty good position for being one game in the wild card. The Atlanta Braves will take on their division leader Philadelphia while the Cardinals take on last place Houston. If both teams are even, the tie breaking game would take place Thursday at Busch Stadium, so there is a good chance Pujols could put on the home whites again this season.

Pujols tried not to look too far ahead, but he was touched by the fan reaction.

“It’s pretty emotional, obviously,” Pujols said. “You have the best fans in baseball; over 3 million people every year come and support this ballclub. Obviously, it’s not over. Our season’s not over. And I just want to make sure that I stay focused and do what I need to do.”

Pujols is eligible for free agency at the end of the season, and the Cardinals will still have time for exclusive negotiating time before free agency begins, but all signs point to Pujols testing the market.
“Those decisions are going to come, like I told you guys in Spring Training, in the offseason,” Pujols said. “Right now, I’m still a Cardinal. I’m going to do my best to help this organization to get to the next level, and that’s my job. If I try to get distracted, thinking about what’s going to happen this offseason, what’s going to happen the next four games, I don’t think I’m doing my job.”

Session continues at low ebb (AUDIO)

The legislative chambers are quiet this week and the capitol halls are empty. But the special legislative session is still going on although it looked for a while last week that the frustrated state senate was ready to just chuck the whole thing. Senators were upset that the House leaders and the Governor cooked up a deal on an economic development package without including the senate in negotiations. They were upset that the economic development bill the senate had passed was stalled in a House committee that wouldn’t even take a vote on it. They were upset that the House hadn’t done anything to advance its own economic development bill. [Read more...]