Monarchs drop series opener to Canaries

by Caleb Grizzle, Monarchs

The Kansas City Monarchs (25-12) couldn’t take flight against the Sioux Falls Canaries (12-26) Friday and fell in a close, 5-4 fashion.

The Monarchs started their Friday night right with some two-out magic in the first frame with a Matt Adams two-run blast to right field, following a Gaby Guerrero single.

Akeem Bostick received the start for Kansas City and produced two scoreless innings before surrendering any runs to the Canaries. The Monarchs turned a much needed 6-4-3 double play in the first to snuff out any early momentum for the Canaries.

Both offenses went quietly in the second with flyouts and a pop out from the Monarchs, and a one, two, three inning from Bostick. Bostick recorded his first strikeout to start the second and retired the next two batters with help from the field.

The Monarchs went scoreless in the third, stranding one in scoring position, leading 2-0 heading into the home half.

The Canaries swooped in and stole the lead in the third inning behind a flurry of runs. Aggressive base-running and a leadoff single from Nick Gotta sparked the scoring in the third. Following a walk to load the bases, a hard hit grounder to second base forced an errant throw from Darnell Sweeney that led to two runs to tie the game. The Canaries, with only one out, were not done in the inning with three more RBI singles, before the Monarchs could end the inning.


In the fourth, the Monarchs responded quickly with a leadoff single and aggressive base-running of their own. David Thompson’s leadoff single was followed up by patience at the plate from Jan Hernandez. With two on and no outs the Monarchs executed a double steal during a strikeout. Pete Kozma delivered with an RBI single bringing home the All-Star starters, Thompson and Hernandez. Bostick settled down after the five-run third inning, with a one, two, three frame in the bottom of the fourth. Bostick needed only nine pitches to retire the side.

The fifth inning was scoreless for both teams even as the Canaries threatened, with runners in scoring position, to try and extend their one run lead.

In the sixth, the Monarchs were retired in one, two, three fashion by the Canaries’ reliever Mitchell Walters. Bostick recorded two outs in the bottom of the sixth before Kansas City turned the ball over to Brandon Koch to hold the Canaries at bay in the sixth.

In the top of the seventh, the Monarchs nearly tied it following a one-out double from J.C. Escarra but were unable to bring him home after a warning track flyout from Willie Abreu. Escarra tagged to third base, but after some nifty fielding from the Canaries, they closed the door on the Monarchs comeback attempt in the seventh.

In the home half of the seventh, Koch continued to work in the seventh inning, allowing no runs, one hit and securing one strikeout to continue to hold the Canaries close heading into the final frames.

In the eighth, the Monarchs were shut down and held scoreless after the Canaries called upon their bullpen to bring in Matthew Dunaway. Dunaway retired the Monarchs in order and recorded one strikeout.

The Monarchs relied on Frank Rubio to replace Brandon Koch to hold the Canaries scoreless and provide them one final shot at stealing game one of their the three-game series.

The Canaries’ Riley Ferrell struck out the first batter he faced in the top of the ninth and retired the next two batters he faced to secure his sixth save and slam the door on the Monarchs.

The Monarchs will continue their road trip with game two of three against the Sioux Falls Canaries at 6:05 p.m. Saturday, June 25. The away game can be heard on the Monarchs Broadcast Network with the pre-game beginning at 5:35 p.m. and the video stream airing on aabaseball.tv.

Tickets to Monarchs games can be purchased by calling 913-328-5618 or by visiting monarchsbaseball.com.

Police Athletic League camp teaches football, life skills

Future running backs went through agility and speed drills at the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Athletic League football camp on Saturday at Bishop Ward’s Dorney Field. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

by Brian Turrel

The Kansas City, Kansas, Police Athletic League sponsored a football camp on Saturday for ages 8 to 18, with around 150 young athletes participating.

The camp, held at Bishop Ward’s Dorney Field, brought together local high school and youth coaches, former NFL players, and police volunteers for a day of building football skills and community relationships.

Before the camp started, former Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Gehrig Dieter talked about his father, who was a police officer in South Bend, Indiana.

“My dad was always my coach,” said Dieter, “and I just know the impact he’s had on people, on my former teammates that still keep up with him, and he still keeps up with them. I think having that impact, that lasting relationship, is such a huge thing.”

Dieter, who retired from professional football earlier this month after five years with the Chiefs, looked like a future coach as he smoothly led drills with a group of about 15 middle school and high school receivers.

The young athletes started in a large group for stretching and warmups and then split into age and position groups to drill on specific skills.

With the camp’s theme of Tackling Conflict Together, campers also had the opportunity to hear about making good lifestyle choices and to commit to a future of nonviolence.

The camp was the first of what is planned to be an annual event. Police Chief Karl Oakman expressed his hopes for what the camp and other police – community events can accomplish.

“We do a lot of enforcement things,” said the chief. “We’re going to do those. We have to do those, but I think it’s important to make sure that we’re putting resources in our young people, not only just to reduce violence but to increase that positive relationship between the police and young people.”

Former Chiefs wide receiver Gehrig Dieter tossed the ball to a young wide receiver. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Young receivers participated in catching and route-running drills. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Young receivers participated in catching and route-running drills. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Running backs participated in speed and agility drills. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Young linemen ran through blocking and agility drills. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Receivers practiced running routes and catching the ball. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Quarterbacks practiced their technique in a passing drill. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Young running backs participated in drill of short passing routes. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Schlagle head football coach Cernyn Macon guided young running backs in a pass-catching drill. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Kansas City, Kansas, Police Chief Karl Oakman, left, talked with former Chiefs wide receiver Gehrig Dieter before the camp started. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Chiefs’ mascot K.C. Wolf got in some catch before the camp started. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Chiefs’ mascot K.C. Wolf helped demonstrate stretches for the campers. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Receivers practiced running routes and catching the ball. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Young linemen ran through blocking and agility drills. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

Sporting travels to Seattle for away match this afternoon

Two of the most successful clubs in the past decade of American soccer will meet on Saturday in a nationally televised Western Conference clash when Sporting Kansas City (4-9-4, 16 points) takes on 2022 Concacaf Champions League winners Seattle Sounders FC (6-6-2, 20 points).

Saturday’s match will kick off at 2 p.m. Saturday on ABC and ESPN Deportes.

Local radio coverage will air on Sports Radio 810 WHB and La Grande 1340 AM.

Sporting Kansas City enters the showdown with Seattle coming off back-to-back wins for the first time this season.

Sporting snapped Nashville’s 25-match home unbeaten streak with a 2-1 road win last Sunday and followed the performance with a 6-0 triumph — matching the club record for largest margin of victory — over Union Omaha in the U.S. Open Cup Quarterfinals on Wednesday at Children’s Mercy Park.

Daniel Salloi scored twice for Sporting in the mid-week match — becoming the team’s all-time leading scorer in the U.S. Open Cup — and now has six goals in all competitions this season, one behind Johnny Russell for the team lead.

Russell has six goals in seven career appearances against the Sounders, which stands as the most Sporting’s captain has scored against any MLS opponent.

While Sporting KC is navigating the team’s third match in seven days during a stretch of the schedule in which SKC plays five of six MLS matches away from home, Seattle is currently in the midst of a five-match homestand at Lumen Field.

The Sounders’ home field was selected last week as a FIFA World Cup 2026 host venue and was filled with 68,741 fans last month as Seattle lifted the Concacaf Champions League trophy.

The last time Sporting KC played a reigning Concacaf champion was nearly 20 years ago in August 2002 when the then-Wizards faced the 2000 Concacaf Champions Cup winners LA Galaxy.

Current Sounders assistant coach Preki scored for KC on the day and now works alongside Seattle’s general manager and president of soccer, Garth Lagerwey, who began his MLS career as a teammate with Preki in Kansas City for the league’s inaugural season in 1996.

The Sounders, now poised to become the first MLS team to participate in the FIFA Club World Cup, joined Major League Soccer in 2009 and have become a perennial championship contender alongside Sporting in the Western Conference.

The two sides lead all American MLS clubs with four major domestic trophies in the past decade and are the only two Western Conference teams with 10 or more playoff appearances since 2011.

Seattle narrowly leads the all-time regular season series with a 10-9-4 record. The Sounders went 7-1-1 in the first nine meetings from 2009-2014, however Sporting has gone 8-3-3 since with wins in four of the last five matches and victories in each of the team’s past three trips to Lumen Field.

Sporting Kansas City goalkeeper Tim Melia has an 8-3-2 record with five shutouts and a 1.08 goals against average in 13 regular season appearances against Seattle. Since joining SKC in 2015, Melia’s 63 regular season shutouts are most in MLS with Sounders goalkeeper Stefan Frei a close second having compiled 60 clean sheets in the past eight seasons. Frei ranks third in MLS history in both goalkeeping wins (141) and shutouts (88), and his next appearance will be his 300th in all competitions for the Sounders.

Seattle’s roster, which features a pair of former SKC teammates in defender Jimmy Medranda and midfielder Kelyn Rowe, is headlined by six 2021 MLS All-Stars – Alex Roldan, Cristian Roldan, Nouhou, Yeimar, Joao Paulo and Raul Ruidiaz – as well as 2020 MLS MVP finalists Nicolas Lodeiro and Jordan Morris. Lodeiro leads the team with eight goals in all competitions this year and Cristian Roldan has a team-best eight assists, however Paulo and Ruidiaz are among four Seattle starters sidelined due to injury along with Obed Vargas and Xavier Arreaga.

Manager Peter Vermes will also be without four players on Saturday as Gadi Kinda, Alan Pulido, Nikola Vujnovic and Ozzie Cisneros continue to recover from injuries. Defender Kortne Ford, who scored for Sporting on Wednesday before exiting the match prior to halftime, is listed as questionable on the team’s player availability report.

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