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Arroyo fades in 6th, Reds lose to Cardinals 5-1

ST. LOUIS (AP) — After five perfect innings, Bronson Arroyo felt like an underdog. The St. Louis Cardinals often have that effect.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 10 April 2013

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Ex-players call NFL brain-injury panel a 'sham'

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Former NFL players trying to sue the league over concussion-linked injuries argued in court Tuesday that the NFL "glorified" violence and profited from damaging hits to the head.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 10 April 2013

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WOMEN'S NCAA TOURNEY: Louisville overwhelmed by UConn for title

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Shoni Schimmel smiled and hugged her teammates, almost as if she was celebrating, when the clock hit zero and Louisville had fallen hard to Connecticut in the women's NCAA championship game.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 10 April 2013

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Reds' 9-run 9th spoils Cardinals' home opener

 

 

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Shin-Soo Choo is way off the hook.

The new Cincinnati center fielder made amends for two botched fly balls, drawing a leadoff walk in a nine-run ninth inning and later delivering a three-run double as the Reds spoiled the St. Louis Cardinals' home opener with a 13-4 victory on Monday.

"I almost died and my teammates gave me another life," Choo said. "I really appreciate my teammates, coming over to me and saying everybody makes mistakes.

"I missed two fly balls and in my mind I had to do something to help the team."

Mitchell Boggs (0-1), the stand-in closer for St. Louis, yielded six runs while getting only one out. Only a few thousand fans remained of the largest regular-season crowd of 47,375 for the bottom of the ninth in 8-year-old Busch Stadium history.

A day earlier, the Cardinals scored nine runs in the fourth inning against Giants ace Matt Cain.

"I think this is the worst outing of my career," said Boggs, who has one save in two chances along with a bloated 14.54 ERA. "I guess without saying there's a lot of season left and I expect to be a player with a lot of good ones."

The defending NL Central champions Cardinals held a tribute for Stan Musial before the game. They've lost three straight home openers and six of the last seven.

Brandon Phillips blooped a go-ahead double in the ninth. He earlier hit his 150th career homer for the Reds, who have won six of seven since losing in extra innings to the Angels on opening day and totaled 11 or more hits the last four games.

Jay Bruce had four hits and Chris Heisey doubled twice with an RBI.

Sam LeCure (1-0) pitched an inning for the win.

Cardinals lefty Jaime Garcia matched his career best with 10 strikeouts in 6 2-3 innings and left with a 4-3 lead. Yadier Molina hit both of the fly balls dropped by Choo in the first and sixth, and added an RBI single.

Pinch-hitter Xavier Paul tied it in the Reds' eighth with an RBI single off Trevor Rosenthal before the Reds took off in the ninth with six hits, five walks and an error. The Cardinals last surrendered nine runs in the ninth in a 12-9 loss at Colorado on July 6, 2010.

Prior to the game, Musial's four children unveiled an oversized red No. 6, the Hall of Famer's retired jersey number, on the wall in left-center. The decal matches memorial patches worn on the team's uniform sleeves.

Reds players stood on the top dugout steps as the Cardinals paraded around the warning track in flat-bed trucks, and Cincinnati manager Dusty Baker hugged Cardinals Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith.

Choo entered the season with 652 games of outfield experience but only 10 in center, and all 155 games with the Indians last year as the right fielder. Two runs scored in the first when Choo twice juggled Molina's fly ball after backtracking, and Matt Holliday scored from first to put the Cardinals up 4-2 in the sixth when the ball popped out on Choo, perhaps fighting the sun.

It was the second two-error game of Choo's career, the other coming on May 25, 2011 against the Red Sox. He's the first Reds center fielder to commit two errors in a game since Deion Sanders on April 28, 1995, against the Padres.

"You get a little gun-shy out there, it happens," Baker said. "It's a new position, a new league, a new park. Those balls went 400 feet, it's not like they were just fly balls."

Reds starter Mat Latos allowed one earned run in six innings, shaving his ERA to 10.23 in five career starts at Busch to 10.23.

Garcia struck out four of the first six batters and retired eight in a row before issuing a four-pitch, two-out walk to Latos in the third. He entered with a 2.48 career ERA at Busch, the stadium's best, and his other 10-strikeout game was at home Aug. 19 against the Pirates.

"It doesn't really matter how we lose the game, stuff happens," Garcia said. "You know what, they've got a good thing going on."

NOTES: The Reds totaled two errors their first six games while their opponents had 12. ... Jason Isringhausen and Jim Edmonds, teammates on the Cardinals' 2006 championship team, threw first pitches to injured closer Jason Motte and Adam Wainwright. ... Bruce has four consecutive multiple-hit games.

Last Updated on Monday, 08 April 2013

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Hafner, Cano power Yankees past Indians

CLEVELAND (AP) — Travis Hafner tipped his cap and soaked in the applause from Indians fans who spent 10 years pulling for him.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 09 April 2013

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