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6 run 5th inning rally helps Royals beat Cardinals 10-7 in Jac Caglianone's debut

6 run 5th inning rally helps Royals beat Cardinals 10-7 in Jac Caglianone's debut

Yahoo7 days ago

St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Steven Matz throws during the fifth inning of a baseball game against the Kansas City Royals, Tuesday, June 3, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Scott Kane)
St. Louis Cardinals' Alec Burleson runs the bases after hitting a two-run home run off Kansas City Royals' Michael Lorenzen during the third inning of a baseball game Tuesday, June 3, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Scott Kane)
Kansas City Royals' Bobby Witt Jr. hits a two RBI single during the fifth inning of a baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals, Tuesday, June 3, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Scott Kane)
Kansas City Royals' Nick Loftin hits a solo home run during the fifth inning of a baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals, Tuesday, June 3, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Scott Kane)
Kansas City Royals' Nick Loftin hits a solo home run during the fifth inning of a baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals, Tuesday, June 3, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Scott Kane)
St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Steven Matz throws during the fifth inning of a baseball game against the Kansas City Royals, Tuesday, June 3, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Scott Kane)
St. Louis Cardinals' Alec Burleson runs the bases after hitting a two-run home run off Kansas City Royals' Michael Lorenzen during the third inning of a baseball game Tuesday, June 3, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Scott Kane)
Kansas City Royals' Bobby Witt Jr. hits a two RBI single during the fifth inning of a baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals, Tuesday, June 3, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Scott Kane)
Kansas City Royals' Nick Loftin hits a solo home run during the fifth inning of a baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals, Tuesday, June 3, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Scott Kane)
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Nick Loftin homered to start a six-run fifth inning, Bobby Witt Jr. also homered and the Kansas City Royals erased a five-run deficit to beat the St. Louis Cardinals 10-7 on Tuesday night in the major league debut of top Royals' prospect Jac Caglianone.
Caglianone, recalled from Triple-A Omaha on Monday, went hitless in five at bats.
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Daniel Lynch IV, Steven Cruz (2-0), Angel Zerpa, John Schreiber and Taylor Clarke combined to pitch 5 1/3 innings of scoreless relief before Carlos Estévez pitched a scoreless ninth for his 17th save.
Vinnie Pasquantino hit a game-tying two-run double off Cardinals reliever Steven Matz (3-2), and Salvador Perez followed with an RBI single to give Kansas City an 8-7 fifth inning lead.
Loftin hit his first home run since last June 18 to start the rally. After Drew Waters, Kyle Isbel and Jonathan India singled, Witt hit a two-run single to right field to cut Kansas City's deficit to 7-5 ending Cardinals starter Andre Pallante's night.
Pallante allowed a career high-tying seven runs on seven hits in 4 1/3 innings.
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Alec Burleson hit a two-run home run to center field to cap off a five-run third inning and chase Michael Lorenzen (3-7) from the game after allowing seven runs on seven hits in 2 2/3 innings.
Witt hit his seventh home run of the season to give Kansas City a 2-0 first inning lead.
Key moment
Caglianone stepped up to the plate for the first time to lead off the top of the second inning. He lined a 2-2 pitch to the warning track in right-center field where Victor Scott II ran 92 feet to rob him of his first career hit.
Key stat
St. Louis lost for the first time in eight games when scoring at least four runs in Pallante's starts.
Up next
Royals LHP Noah Cameron (2-1, 1.05 ERA) will face Cardinals RHP Miles Mikolas (4-2, 3.90) Wednesday night.
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

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Juneteenth started with handbills proclaiming freedom. Here's what they said
Juneteenth started with handbills proclaiming freedom. Here's what they said

San Francisco Chronicle​

time30 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Juneteenth started with handbills proclaiming freedom. Here's what they said

DALLAS (AP) — The origin of the Juneteenth celebrations marking the end of slavery in the U.S. goes back to an order issued as Union troops arrived in Texas at the end of the Civil War. It declared that all enslaved people in the state were free and had 'absolute equality.' Word quickly spread of General Order No. 3 — issued on June 19, 1865, when U.S. Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger landed in the South Texas port city of Galveston — as troops posted handbills and newspapers published them. The Dallas Historical Society will put one of those original handbills on display at the Hall of State in Fair Park starting June 19. Juneteenth became a federal holiday in the U.S. in 2021 but has been celebrated in Texas since 1866. As time passed, communities in other states also started to mark the day. 'There'd be barbecue and celebrations,' said Portia D. Hopkins, the historian for Rice University in Houston. 'It was really an effort for people to say: Look at how far we've come. Look at what we've been able to endure as a community.' Progression of freedom On Jan. 1, 1863, nearly two years into the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which declared the freedom of 'all persons held as slaves' in the still rebellious states of the Confederacy. But it didn't mean immediate freedom. 'It would take the Union armies moving through the South and effectively freeing those people for that to come to pass,' said Edward T. Cotham Jr., a historian and author of the book 'Juneteenth: The Story Behind the Celebration.' The proclamation didn't apply to the border states that allowed enslavement but didn't leave the Union, nor the states occupied by the Union at the time, said Erin Stewart Mauldin, chair of southern history at the University of South Florida in St. Petersburg. 'You have to think of emancipation as a patchwork," she said. 'It doesn't happen all at once. It is hyper local.' Still, she said, the proclamation 'was recognized immediately as this watershed moment in history.' "The Emancipation Proclamation is the promise that the end of slavery is now a war aim,' Mauldin said. Texas at the end of the war As the war progressed, many enslavers from the South fled to Texas, causing the state's enslaved population to balloon from about 182,000 in 1860 to 250,000 by the end of the war in 1865, Mauldin said. Cotham said that while enslaved people were emancipated 'on a lot of different dates in a lot of different places across the country,' June 19 is the most appropriate date to celebrate the end of slavery because it represents the 'last large intact body of enslaved people to be freed." He said many enslaved people across the South knew of the Emancipation Proclamation, but that it didn't mean anything until troops arrived to enforce it. About six months after General Order No. 3 was issued, the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery was ratified. 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Chiao said their handbill is the only one they know of that still exists. The National Archives holds the official handwritten record of General Order No. 3. What freedom looks like 'Some of the people who were set free stayed on the plantations and worked for their former owners, others left, they went to Houston, to Dallas, or they went to San Antonio seeking work,' said W. Marvin Dulaney, deputy director of the African American Museum of Dallas. While there was excitement, the newly freed people knew they had to 'build up what citizenship looked like for them,' Hopkins of Rice University said, and that there was still 'a lot of work to do.' 'You changed the relationship between the enslaver and the enslaved but you didn't change the culture or the societal norms with how enslavers treated enslaved people,' she said. Mauldin said participants in early Juneteenth celebrations were 'incredibly brave," noting that by 1868, the Ku Klux Klan was established in Texas. They were celebrating their freedom, she said, 'under constant threat of violence.' 'It does take time for sort of what freedom is going to look like to be made real, and in large part the reason that freedom is made real is because of ex-slaves pushing for what they think freedom should be,' Mauldin said. 'It's not being given to them, they are actively fighting for it.'

Shedeur Sanders is preaching patience as he settles in as the Browns' 4th-string QB
Shedeur Sanders is preaching patience as he settles in as the Browns' 4th-string QB

Associated Press

time30 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Shedeur Sanders is preaching patience as he settles in as the Browns' 4th-string QB

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Tar Heels players embrace new world as part of coach Bill Belichick's first college team
Tar Heels players embrace new world as part of coach Bill Belichick's first college team

Hamilton Spectator

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Tar Heels players embrace new world as part of coach Bill Belichick's first college team

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — Jordan Shipp remembers the conversation with his roommates after learning Bill Belichick was North Carolina's new coach. 'It was just like, 'That's the greatest coach of all time,'' the receiver recalled, ''and he's about to be a coaching us.'' Belichick's arrival has triggered plenty of change for the Tar Heels, who are making a big bet on the man who won six Super Bowls as an NFL head coach to spark their football program . No one knows that better than the players — both the holdovers and the transfer-portal arrivals — after months of Belichick overhauling the roster and building the foundation on his first college team. North Carolina players hadn't spoken to reporters since last year's team ended its season with a Fenway Bowl loss to UConn three days after Christmas, all of which came after Belichick had been hired as coach for the 2025 season. So Tuesday marked the first time UNC had made players available to reporters since then to discuss Belichick's arrival. That has meant being coached by someone with a long track record of success at the sport's highest level, along with getting a peek behind the terse and grumpy persona he was known for with the New England Patriots. Defensive back Will Hardy said the players are used to curiosity that comes with being coached by the NFL lifer now giving college a try. 'There's a lot of that, you get a lot of 'How is Coach Belichick? What's new? What's different?'' Hardy said. 'So I've rehearsed these questions a lot with family and friends.' Formative stages The school hired Belichick in December to elevate the program at a time when football's role as the revenue driver in college sports has never been bigger. He and general manager Michael Lombardi have described their goal as building a pro-style model at the college level. It's been a key pitch as the 73-year-old Belichick made his first foray onto the recruiting trail, as well as the volume of players transferring in and out of the program. Belichick's first on-field work in Chapel Hill came during spring workouts, lodged between portal windows in December and April. 'Look, these are great kids to work with, they really are,' Belichick said Tuesday. 'We've had great buy-in. There have really been no problems at all. These guys are on time, they're early, they work hard, they put in the work in the weight room, out on the field. They spend time on their own, whether it's doing extra training or coming over and watching film and that type of thing. 'They've made a ton of improvement and these guys are a lot better than they were when we started in January, on every level. So it's exciting to see where that's going to take us.' Enticing opportunity For the players, part of the adjustment had been the reality that their coach was winning Super Bowls with quarterback Tom Brady while they were growing up and watching on TV. Intimidating much? 'I mean, maybe at first when you see him, all you see is the Super Bowls that he's won,' said offensive lineman Christo Kelly, a Holy Cross transfer and Belichick's first portal commitment. 'But when you get here and you see the way he cares, you see the way that he approaches the game, you see how hard he works, there's no question why he has the success that he has. 'The attention to detail, the emphasis on fundamentals, and really just kind of creating competition for the guys, that's what's getting built here. Guys are embracing it. He treats everybody with tremendous respect and it's been great.' Defensive back Thad Dixon had met Belichick before when he was at Washington, playing under Belichick's son Steve — now the Tar Heels' defensive coordinator and linebackers coach. The two shared a few conversations then, and he jumped at the chance to head east. 'I really just wanted the opportunity just to learn from somebody like that, that had did it in the league for so long,' Dixon said. Behind the curtain Yet not every surprise has been about X's and O's. Sometimes it's simply when Belichick has dropped the all-business facade to expose an unexpectedly humorous side. 'I feel like that's the biggest curveball, you're coming to the first meeting and you're expecting it to be serious, 100% locked in,' said Shipp, who played 12 games for UNC last season. 'He comes in and he introduces himself and then he busts a joke. That's the second thing he said.' Hardy pointed that vibe, too. 'There are times when he'll just crack a joke out of nowhere,' he said. 'And just him being kind of monotone sometimes will make those jokes so funny.' Still, Hardy noted it's mingled amid the work, such as film sessions when 'there's no hiding' when Belichick highlights a mistake. UNC opens the season on Labor Day against TCU in a college version of Monday Night Football. 'I've loved having 1-on-1 conversations with him,' Hardy said. 'It's cool to see and meet him personally, because you grow up and see him on TV and everything. And he's just a completely different coach and guy when you get to be around him all day. It's cool.' ___ AP college football: and

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