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Arenado Record Streak, Rockies Rout Texas 9-2

colorado-rockiesARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Nolan Arenado had three hits to extend his hitting streak to 27 games, matching Colorado’s team record, and the Rockies had their third lopsided victory over Texas in as many nights, 9-2 on Wednesday.

Arenado’s two-run double in the first inning put the Rockies ahead to stay and equaled teammate Michael Cuddyer’s record streak from last season.

Carlos Gonzalez homered for Colorado, which has outscored Texas 29-5 in three games this week. The Rockies won 8-2 and 12-1 at home with a combined 34 hits before the teams shifted to Texas for two games.

Every starter had a hit for the Rockies, who finished with 16 and got 12 of them in 3 2-3 innings off Colby Lewis (2-2).

Jorge De La Rosa (4-3) struck out four and walked three. The lefty gave up two runs over six innings.

The Lady Dawgs Season Ends in the District Finals

North Platte Bulldogs SoccerThe North Platte Lady Bulldogs soccer team  had their season come to an end on Wednesday night after losing to Kearney in the A-5 District final 2-0.

The match was scoreless after the first half of play between the two rival schools. Kearney, however scored early in the second half to take control then added one more goal for good measure. It was the first time this season that the Lady Dawgs were shutout as they fall one match shy of the Class A State Tournament. Kearney advances to state with the win.

North Platte finished the season with a 13-5 record and were statistically led by a trio of seniors. Taylor Banark led the team in goals with 22 and assists with 20 to finish her senior season with a team-high 64 points. She will be playing at Hastings College next season. Madalynn Doughty was second on the team with 28 points. Doughty scored 10 goals and had eight assists. She will move on and play at the University of Nebraska-Kearney next year. Third in the points category for North Platte was Marisa Martinez with 26 points. Martinez, who will be playing at Midland University next season, had nine goals and eight assists to cap her high school career. Hannah Wilke will also be playing at the next level. She will head west to Scottsbluff to play for Western Nebraska Community College.

Arenado’s 27-Game Hit Streak Ties Rockies’ Record

Nolan Arenado Colorado RockiesARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Colorado Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado has tied the team record with a 27-game hitting streak.

Arenado needed little time to extend his string Wednesday night. He hit a two-run double in the first inning against the Texas Rangers to equal teammate Michael Cuddyer’s 27-game streak from last season.

Arenado’s streak is the longest for anyone 23 years or younger since Albert Pujols had a 30-gamer in 2003 when he was 23.

The streak for Arenado began April 9, a week before his 23rd birthday. According to Elias, his streak is the longest that began when a player was 22 or younger since Benito Santiago’s 34-game hitting streak in 1987, which is still a major league rookie record.

Shields Pitches Royals past Padres 8-0

kc-royalsSAN DIEGO (AP) — James Shields scattered seven hits over seven innings, Eric Hosmer drove in a season-high four runs and the Kansas City Royals beat the San Diego Padres 8-0 Wednesday.

The Royals scored three times in the first and that was plenty for Shields (4-3). He struck out four, walked two and threw 118 pitches.

Two relievers finished for the Royals. The Padres were shut out for a major league-high sixth time this season. San Diego has lost six of eight overall.

Andrew Cashner (2-5) lasted a season-low four innings.

Elway Finds Himself in Enviable Position Again

John-Elway-Denver-BroncosENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — John Elway has turned the Denver Broncos from riff-raff to royalty in three years.

He had the second overall pick in the 2011 NFL draft and chose Von Miller. He has the second-to-last selection this time around, and that could prove an enviable position, too.

Four quarterbacks are expected to hear their names called in the first round Thursday night. If Johnny Manziel, Teddy Bridgewater, Blake Bortles and Derek Carr all go before the Broncos make their pick, prime players at other positions will be pushed down the board, giving Denver added value at No. 31.

If even one of those four QBs, or maybe even a guy like Jimmy Garoppolo, is still available, Elway can expect some phone calls.

Rockies Beat Rangers 12-1 with Season-High 21 Hits

colorado-rockiesDENVER (AP) — Carlos Gonzalez had five of Colorado’s season-high 21 hits and Nolan Arenado made several slick plays at third base on a night he extended his hitting streak to 26 games as the Rockies routed the Texas Rangers 12-1 on Tuesday night.

It’s the third time in Gonzalez’s career he’s had five hits in a game. Arenado waited until his final at-bat in the seventh to extend his streak, lacing an RBI double that hit just inside the left-field line. He’s one away from tying the team record of 27 set by Michael Cuddyer last season.

Juan Nicasio (4-1) got through five innings without his best command, giving up two hits and one run. He also walked a season-high five.

Robbie Ross Jr. (1-2) had a rough outing as he allowed six runs and 12 hits in 5 1-3 innings.

Storm Select Appleton Third Overall In Phase 2

tcstormKEARNEY, Neb. – The Tri-City Storm used their third overall pick in Phase 2 of the 2014 USHL Draft to select forward Mason Appleton of Notre Dame Academy on Tuesday morning, highlighting a day in which 23 names were added to the team’s Initial Protected List for the 2014-15 season.

Appleton, who hails from Green Bay, Wis., is coming off a big year in which he scored 30 goals and 40 assists in 28 games. Tri-City is hoping he’ll fill a big hole in the middle of the ice, as a big six-foot, two-inch center.

In addition to Appleton and forward Wade Allison, who the Storm signed to a tender on Monday, the team had three second round selections, who they used on goaltender Alec Dillon, forward Andy Sturtz and defenseman Cam Spicer.

Head coach and general manager Jim Hulton said the mandate heading into the draft was to get bigger and be harder to play against, and he felt both of those areas were addressed.

“I think we’re very happy,” Hulton said. “Most teams are optimistic at this point in time after the draft but we had a number of people on our wish list and we emerged from the draft with the majority of them. The broad mandate was to get a little bit older, a little bit bigger, and address some offense, and competitiveness and we think fortunately we’ve covered all areas.”

With Allison, Appleton and Sturtz, Hulton felt that right away, he was able to bring in some more offense with three of his first four Phase 2 selections. He was then in the position to take some other risks with picks that could potentially benefit the team for years to come.

“I think when you look at the player we tendered in Wade Allison who scored 70 plus goals in Omaha, Appleton, who scored 30+ goals, and Sturtz, who’s an older kid that led a pretty good Ottawa district league in scoring with over 100 points, I think those three alone addresses some of the offensive issues,” Hulton said.

With goaltender Hayden Lavigne eligible to return next season, Tri-City added to their netminding talent when they selected Dillon in the second round, 21st overall.

“We’re ecstatic with our goaltending tandem of Hayden Lavigne and Alec Dillon,” Hulton said. “Dillon is a big kid with junior experience in Victoria of the BCHL. He comes highly recommended and is widely regarded in hockey circles. To have two kids that could possibly be drafted in the National Hockey League really solidifies that area and if you can have strength in goaltending and defense no matter what league you’re in, you’re going to be successful.”

In addition to the 23 picks, Tri-City also announced the acquisition of defenseman Bobby Nardella from the Sioux City Musketeers. Nardella serves as the player to be named later in the deal the teams made for Joel L’Esperance on Jan. 20.

In 58 total games for the Musketeers this season, Nardella had two goals and 13 assists. A native of Rosemont, Ill., the blue-liner is committed to play collegiately at Notre Dame.

“It’s finally nice to be able to talk about Bobby Nardella because we had to keep that under wraps for a long time,” Hulton said. “He was a player to be named later and out of respect to Bobby and the Sioux City organization, it couldn’t be announced.

“He was a big part of the Joel L’Esperance trade in addition to Jake Wahlin so we think we’ve got two big pieces of our puzzle. Now when you look at what defensive experience we have returning with Nardella, Dello, Kerr, Schulz, some of the people that we’ve added today and some of the people we’ve already had in our system, we’re extremely excited. We think our back end is going to be amongst the most mobile in the entire USHL next year and I think when you look at the way the game’s played today, if you can have a mobile, puck moving back end, it’s one of the first keys to success.”

The full list of players drafted today is below. It is also viewable on stormhockey.com.

In addition to these draft picks, the Storm have 18 players from the 2013-14 roster that will be eligible to try out for next season’s team.

Tri-City Storm 2014 USHL Phase 2 Draft Selections

1st Round Tender: Wade Allison – Forward – Myrtle, MB – Omaha AAA

1st Round: Mason Appleton – Forward – Green Bay, WI – Notre Dame Academy

2nd Round: Alec Dillon – Goalie – Victoria, BC – Victoria Grizzlies
2nd Round: Andy Sturtz – Forward – Buffalo, NY – Carleton Place
2nd Round: Cam Spicer – Defense – Erie, CO – New Hampshire Jr. Monarchs

4th Round: Cullen Munson – Forward – Edina, MN – Edina High School

5th Round: Andrew Peski – Defense – Orleans, ON – Brockville Braves

5th Round: Mark Petaccio – Forward – Sicklerville, NJ – Pembroke Lumber Kings
7th Round: Jack McNeely – Defense – Lakeville North, MN – Lakeville North High School
9th Round: Johnny McDermott – Forward – Darien, CT – Westminster Prep School
10th Round: Carson Meyer – Forward – Powell, OH – Ohio Jr. Blue Jackets
10th Round: Blake Weyrick – Goalie – Malibu, CA – USA U-18 Team
11th Round: Joel Herbert – Forward – Edson, AB – Whitecourt Wolverines
12th Round: James Gobetz – Defense – St. James, NY – Salisbury School
13th Round: Brian Yoon – Defense – Parker, CO – Colorado Thunderbirds
14th Round: Jordan Kawaguchi – Abbottsford, BC – Chilliwack Chiefs
15th Round: Ryan Cloonan – East Longmeadow, MA – Boston Jr. Bruins
16th Round: Benjamin Israel – Bloomington Hills, MI – New Jersey Hitmen
17th Round: Tyler Busch – Lloydminster, AB – Spruce Grove Saints
18th Round: Guy Roby – Philadelphia, PA – Team Comcast
19th Round: Adam Goodsir – Okemos, MI – Lansing Capitals
20th Round: Kohei Sato – Nishitokio City, Japan – CIH Academy

Reeves, Mingo, Upchurch to Broncos Ring of Fame

DenverBroncosENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — Former coach Dan Reeves has been elected into the Denver Broncos’ Ring of Fame along with former halfback/kicker Gene Mingo and returner/receiver Rick Upchurch.

They will be inducted at halftime of the Broncos’ Sept. 14 game against Kansas City at Sports Authority Field.

This is the most inductions in a single year since 1988 when quarterback Craig Morton, wide receiver Haven Moses and kicker Jim Turner were elected.

Team owner Pat Bowlen created the Ring of Fame, which is displayed on the fifth level facade of the stadium, in 1984 to honor former players and administrators who played significant roles in the franchise’s history. There are 27 Ring of Famers including this year’s inductees.

Dawson County Raceway Results

Dawson County RacewayGetting their 2014 season at Dawson County Raceway started off right with a trip to the winners circle was Colton Osborn, Jamey Kennicutt, Mike Nichols and Dillon Thompson on Sunday night in Lexington.

It was an Osborn night in the IMCA Modified division with Colton Osborn of Cozad leading the final ten laps of the feature to cruise to the victory. Osborn started in the inside of row four and showed great patience and prospered with a car that handled quite well from the top to the bottom of the race track. Osborn took over the lead from his brother Cale Osborn of Cozad on lap 10, as a result of Cale getting a new right rear tire after leading the initial nine laps of the contest. Charging forward after a slow start, Ronnie Wallace of McCook was setup to be fast at the right time as he passed into the runner-up position in the last eight laps of the race to finish second overall. Veteran hotshoe David Murrary Jr. of Oberlin, Kansas showcased great consistency to avoid incidents and earn a podium finish in third place. Both Colton and Cale Osborn claimed heat race wins.

In a very competitive race, Jamey Kennicutt of Gothenburg was able to stay near the front throughout the Feature for the IMCA Northern Sport Modifieds to lead the most important laps to earn a season opening victory. Heat race victor Kennicutt started in the fourth row and worked his way into the lead on lap six, as he was dueling with runner-up Denny Egge of Kearney throughout the contest. Kennicutt and Egge were the only two drivers to lead a lap. Heat race winner Egge led the first five laps and the four laps just prior to the white flag being waved. Working the high groove with precision was North Platte’s Zach Schultz with a third place finish from his fourth row starting position.

No stranger to victory lane; Mike Nichols of Harlan, Iowa started on the pole and never trailed in the heated-battles of the IMCA Stock Car Feature. Nichols did have company in the front of the field, but Nichols showed great prowess and ability to snare the victory. Mikey Dancer of North Platte, piloted his Chevy Monte Carlo to a stellar second place finish, after dropping back early on and charging forward with gumption in the closing laps. Reigning season track champion Casey Werkmeister of Maywood was ‘en fuego’ with his new set of wheels rolling up a third place finish. Nichols, Werkmeister and Colton Osborn of Cozad claimed heat race wins in early evening action of the Stock Car division.

In the closest finish of the night, Dillon Thompson of Campbell was the victor by the slimmest of margins over Kyle Bond of Gibbon to earn the first place hardware in the IMCA Hobby Stock division on opening night. Heat race victor Thompson led the first 13 laps and then led the lap that matters the most by less than the length of a fender. Heat race winner Kyle Bond stormed forward from his fourth row starting position to earn the runner-up honors. Bond led the white flag lap and for many laps prior had turned circuits with Thompson in his crosshairs. Having the best seat in the house watching Bond and Thompson duel was the Wilcox wheelman, Anthony Martin who finished third overall. Martin was in the mix from the drop of the green flag to earn the checkered flag honors.

Racing action returns to the fast-paced 3/8 mile dirt oval on the Dawson County Fairgrounds on Sunday, May 11th. Gates open at 5 p.m. with the drop of the green flag being at 6:30 p.m.

 

Unofficial Results:

–IMCA Modified Feature: 1. 50c-Colton Osborn; 2. 3rw-Ronnie Wallace; 3. 97m-David Murrary Jr; 4. 50-Scott Smith; 5. 17j-Jeremy Frenier; 6. XII-Jay Steffens; 7. 59m-Travis Mack; 8. 25-Trevor Baker; 9. 1c-Cole Egge; 10. 6c-Cale Osborn; 11. 29e-Brooke Eilts; 12. 19-Chuck Stryker; 13. 2-Jeremy Herbst; 14. 23s-Josh Sabin.

Heat 1: 1. 50c-Colton Osborn; 2. 97m-David Murrary Jr; 3. 50-Scott Smith.

Heat 2: 1. 6c-Cale Osborn; 2. 3rw-Ronnie Wallace; 3. 59m-Travis Mack.

–IMCA Northern Sport Mod Feature: 1. 15k-Jamey Kennicutt; 2. 1x-Denny Egge; 3. 55z- Zach Schultz; 4. 23mm-Casey Clausen; 5. 25-Toph Harmon; 6. 1-Paul Donovan; 7. 15j-Herb Slough; 8. 13-Terry Dressel; 9. 8c-Corey Cruzan; 10. 68-Craig Howard; 11. 0-Bryan Herrick; 12. 12j-Kerry Jones; 13. 33-Chad Young.

Heat 1: 1. 1-Paul Donovan; 2. 11h-Henry Henderson; 3. 55z-Zach Schultz.

Heat 2: 1. 15k-Jamey Kennicutt; 2. 87d-Chad Dolan; 3. 55d-Dillon Schultz.

Heat 3: 1. 1x-Denny Egge; 2. 25-Toph Harmon; 3. 23mm-Casey Clausen.

–IMCA Stock Car Feature: 1. 63-Mike Nichols; 2. 45-Mikey Dancer; 3. 24w-Casey Werkmeister; 4. 77-Jed Williams; 5. 35jw-Casey Woken; 6. 11k-Kyle Clough; 7. 29e-Brendan Eilts; 8. 21-Shane Stutzman; 9. 42w-Kyle Werkmeister; 10. 09h-Bob Hoing; 11. 10k-Kurt Trusty; 12. 24-Bob Chalupa; 13. 57-Dan Stoll; 14. 72-Robert Walker 15. 00-Sara Klein.

Heat 1: 1. 24w-Casey Werkmeister; 2. 6c-Cale Osborn; 3. 72-Robert Walker.

Heat 2: 1. 63-Mike Nichols; 2. 45-Mikey Dancer; 3. 77-Jed Williams.

Heat 3: 1. 50c-Colton Osborn; 2. 35jw-Casey Woken; 3. 29e-Brendan Eilts.

–IMCA Hobby Stock Feature: 1. 11-Dillon Thompson; 2. 0-Kyle Bond; 3. 9a-Anthony Martin; 4. 85-Robert Leonard; 5. 44-Caleb Hetrick; 6. 2x-Travis Kernick; 7. 2c-Zach Canas; 8. 30a-Adam Morgan; 9. 5-Chuck Ledbetter; 10. 26-Ryan Gardine; 11. 89-Michael Zerr; 12. 53e-Tyler Easterday; 13. 80-Jim Rayburn; 14. 88j-Jacob Olmstead.

Big Ten Men’s Basketball Tournament Heads East with Verizon Center Set to Host in 2017

Big-Ten-LogoRosemont, Ill. — The Big Ten Conference announced today that the Big Ten Men’s Basketball Tournament will make its first appearance on the East Coast when the 2017 event is held at the Verizon Center in Washington, D.C. The 2017 Big Ten Men’s Basketball Tournament will mark the conference’s 20th annual event and will feature all 14 conference institutions in action from Wednesday, March 8, through Sunday, March 12, with the winner earning the Big Ten’s automatic berth to the NCAA Tournament.

“We’re thrilled to announce plans to host the Big Ten Men’s Basketball Tournament in Washington, D.C.,” said Big Ten Commissioner James E. Delany. “We have a great amount of respect for basketball in this region of the country and are pleased that we were able to place this tournament at the Verizon Center at this first possible opportunity in March 2017.”

“We’re very excited the Big Ten Conference has selected our nation’s capital as the site for the 2017 Big Ten Men’s Basketball Tournament,” said University of Maryland Director of Athletics Kevin Anderson. “This is yet another example of the Big Ten’s commitment to our region and provides fans of Maryland and all conference teams on the East Coast easier access to enjoy this outstanding event.”

“We are looking forward to and are honored to host the Big Ten Tournament here in Washington, D.C. for the very first time,” said senior vice president and general manager of Verizon Center, David Touhey. “The excitement that surrounds this conference event is unparalleled and with Maryland becoming a part of the fold officially next season, the tournament is sure to have some added local flair here in the nation’s capital.”

The Big Ten Men’s Basketball Tournament has been held in either Chicago or Indianapolis through the first 17 years of its existence, and returns to Chicago’s United Center for the ninth time in 2015. Indianapolis’ Bankers Life Fieldhouse will host the tournament for the 10th time in 2016. Each of the last two tournaments have been sold out, including a conference record of more than 124,000 fans at the United Center in 2013 and over 111,000 fans at Bankers Life Fieldhouse earlier this year, the largest attendance in Indianapolis. More than 1.6 million fans have enjoyed the tournament since the inaugural event in 1998.

Six different programs have won the Big Ten Men’s Basketball Tournament – Illinois, Iowa, Michigan State, Ohio State, Purdue and Wisconsin – while 10 different schools have advanced to the championship game. History has indicated that any team, regardless of seed, can advance to the title game, as the final matchup has featured teams seeded as high as first, second and third and as low as eighth, ninth, 10th and 11th.

Verizon Center is a 20,000-seat multi-purpose sports and entertainment venue, owned and operated by Monumental Sports & Entertainment (MSE), in downtown Washington, D.C. The arena is home to three professional sports teams, also owned by MSE, the NBA’s Washington Wizards, NHL’s Washington Capitals and WNBA’s Washington Mystics. Hosting an average of 220 events per year, inclusive of games, concerts, family shows and world-class sporting events, Verizon Center sits at the heart of an $8.1 billion redevelopment of downtown that began 16 years ago when the arena opened.

The Big Ten has made a series of announcements highlighting the conference’s increased presence on the East Coast, beginning with the addition of Maryland and Rutgers as future conference members in November 2012.  Last June, the Big Ten announced the acceptance of Johns Hopkins University as the conference’s first sport affiliate member for men’s lacrosse and also announced an agreement to take part in the New Era Pinstripe Bowl, sending conference football teams to play at Yankee Stadium on an annual basis. In April, the Big Ten announced that it would open a second office in New York City while securing access to satellite office space in Washington, D.C. And yesterday in Madison Square Garden, the conference unveiled plans to take part in the Gavitt Tipoff Games, an annual early-season men’s basketball series with the Big East named in honor of Dave Gavitt, founder of the Big East and basketball visionary.

Maryland and Rutgers are set to officially join the Big Ten on July 1, 2014, giving the conference more than 520,000 total students and 5.7 million living alumni. The broad-based athletic programs of the 14 institutions will feature almost 9,500 student-athletes on 350 teams in 43 different sports. With the debut of men’s and women’s lacrosse during the 2014-15 academic year, the Big Ten will sponsor 28 official sports. Maryland and Rutgers are already members of the Committee on Institutional Cooperation, an academic consortium of Big Ten universities and the University of Chicago that is a model for effective and voluntary collaboration among top research universities. In 2012, Big Ten institutions produced over $9.5 billion in research expenditures.

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