East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, June 28, 2019, Page A9, Image 9

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    SPORTS
Friday, June 28, 2019
East Oregonian
A9
Brewers take down M’s 4-2 Fans elect historically young
NL lineup for All-Star Game
By ANDREW WAGNER
Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — Facing
the prospect of a three-game
sweep by the last-place Seat-
tle Mariners, the Milwaukee
Brewers rediscovered their
winning formula.
Orlando Arcia hit a three-
run homer and the Brewers
snapped a two-game skid
with a 4-2 victory over the
Mariners on Thursday.
“We needed it,” out-
fi elder Christian Yelich said.
“That’s the kind of game
we’re accustomed to play-
ing. That’s us, as a team,
that kind of game but it just
hasn’t worked out for us over
the last few weeks. It’s been
a tough stretch, for sure,
but we showed signs of get-
ting back on track and doing
what we’re capable of.”
Yelich narrowly missed
his MLB-leading 30th
home run of the season in
the fi rst inning. The Brew-
ers wouldn’t threaten again
until the fourth when Mike
Leake loaded the bases with
one out to bring up starting
pitcher Chase Anderson.
Anderson put down a
near-perfect suicide squeeze
to score Ryan Braun. And
one pitch later, Arcia sent a
three-run blast to right.
Chase Anderson (4-2)
bounced back after he
allowed six runs in his previ-
ous start. Anderson allowed
two runs, one earned, and
struck out six in 5⅓ innings.
“Chase was really good
today. I thought just the com-
mand of his pitches is what
stood out,” Brewers man-
ager Craig Counsell said.
(Catcher Yasmani Gran-
dal) did a really nice job of
sequences. It wasn’t nec-
essarily the strikeouts that
stood out, it was the popups
and the lazy fl y balls.”
Leake (7-7) allowed four
runs, eight hits and a walk
while striking out fi ve over
By JAKE SEINER
Associated Press
AP Photo/Morry Gash
Milwaukee Brewers’ Orlando Arcia hits a three-run home run
during the fourth inning of a baseball game against the Seat-
tle Mariners Thursday in Milwaukee.
MLB
4
2
Milwaukee
Seattle
(42-38)
(37-47)
Up Next: Today, 5:10 p.m.,
Seattle at Houston
TV: RTNW
six innings.
“I could have placed (the
pitch to Arcia) a little better,”
Leake said. “I could have
gone off the plate and tested
where he was at fi rst instead
of going right at him.
“That one inning was the
blemish.”
Josh Hader struck out
three batters over the fi nal
two innings to earn his 19th
save of the season.
Tim Beckham and Daniel
Vogelbach hit back-to-back
RBI doubles in the sixth for
Seattle.
FLASHBACK FOR
ANDERSON
Anderson said he hadn’t
executed a suicide squeeze
since he was 13 years old,
cashing in on a couple of
errors and scoring the win-
ning run to lead a group of
seventh graders against a
team of eighth graders.
“It’s kind of crazy to
be able to do that in that
moment, sparking a rally,”
Anderson said. “Getting it
started and being an impact
with the bat is a huge advan-
tage for a starting pitcher.”
SANTANA’S STREAK
ENDS
Seattle
outfi elder
Domingo Santana went
0-for-4 with a pair of strike-
outs, ending his nine-game
hitting streak. He batted .353
(12-for-34) during that run
with four doubles, four home
runs and 11 RBIs. He had
two hits, including a double
and two RBIs in the fi rst two
games against Milwaukee,
which dealt him to the Mar-
iners in an offseason trade.
“It was nice to come back
here,” Santana said. “The
fans really appreciate me and
showed it to me. The team —
I have a good chemistry with
them. I really enjoyed being
a Brewer so it was really fun
to come back.”
NEW YORK — Sur-
rounded by sweet-swinging
sluggers Christian Yelich,
Cody Bellinger and Ronald
Acuña Jr., All-Star stalwart
Nolan Arenado is set for a
new role with the National
League — elder statesman.
“It shows how good these
young guys are,” Arenado
said.
The fi ve-time All-Star
will be joined by a bumper
crop of talent in one of the
youngest All-Star Game
lineups ever — a millen-
nial-heavy NL group that
could make history at the
midsummer showcase in
Cleveland on July 9.
Major League Baseball
revealed the results from
fan balloting for its All-Star
starters Thursday, and the
average age of the eight NL
starters is 25.8 years old.
Depending on who is chosen
as the club’s designated hit-
ter, the starting position play-
ers could be the youngest
ever, surpassing the 1967 NL
and 2017 AL clubs, which
averaged 26.0 years old.
“I’ve never seen this
much young talent in the
game,” said Dodgers man-
ager Dave Roberts, who will
lead the NL. “There’s a lot of
fun players to watch — tal-
ented and the personalities
from some of these young
players.”
Angels star Mike Trout
was the leading vote getter
in the fi nal round. He’ll be
joined on the AL squad by
three Astros — Alex Breg-
man, George Springer and
Michael Brantley — and two
Yankees — Gary Sánchez
and DJ LeMahieu.
The lineups are full of
unlikely names. LeMahieu
didn’t crack New York’s
AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill
Los Angeles Dodgers’ Cody Bellinger hits a foul ball that
struck a fan in the stands during the fi rst inning of a base-
ball game against the Colorado Rockies on June 23, 2019,
in Los Angeles.
Star selection. He’ll be joined
in the lineup by Brantley, a
former teammate who left
the Indians in free agency last
offseason for a $32 million,
two-year deal with Hous-
ton. Brantley edged Yankees
slugger Aaron Judge by 0.9%
for the fi nal outfi eld spot.
The Cubs’ Willson Con-
treras and Javier Baez will
each start for the NL for the
second straight year. Baez
was elected at shortstop a
year after starting at second.
Only three other All-Stars
have started in consecutive
years at different positions.
Trout is set to be the sixth
AL player to start six times
before turning 28. The others
are Joe DiMaggio, Mickey
Mantle, Ivan Rodriguez,
Rod Carew and Ken Griffey
Jr. It’s Trout’s eighth straight
selection overall.
“I just enjoy going to
them,” he said. “Every year
it seems like I am slowing
it down and embracing the
experience. The fi rst couple
I was running around and it
went so fast.”
opening day lineup. Rang-
ers designated hitter Hunter
Pence could only fi nd a
minor league contract as
a free agent last offsea-
son. Diamondbacks sec-
ond baseman Ketel Marte
and Twins shortstop Jorge
Polanco hardly garnered All-
Star attention in previous
years. Now they’re All-Star
starters.
“It was quite a wild jour-
ney from this year to last
year,” Pence said. “And to
even be speaking about this
now, is a miracle. It’s a bless-
ing, and I’m very grateful.”
The NL’s oldest elected
starters are 29-year-old Fred-
die Freeman from Atlanta
and 28-year-old Arenado of
Colorado.
“Some of these young
players are unbelievable
players,” Arenado said.
“We’re fortunate to be in this
time, when you get to see
how good they are.”
Indians fi rst baseman
Carlos Santana was elected
to start in his home park in
the 33-year-old’s fi rst All-
SCOREBOARD
BASEBALL
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
W
L
New York
52
28
Tampa Bay
46
35
Boston
44
38
Toronto
29
52
Baltimore
22
58
Central
W
L
Minnesota
52
28
Cleveland
44
36
Chicago
37
41
Kansas City
28
53
Detroit
26
50
West
W
L
Houston
50
32
Texas
45
36
Oakland
43
38
Los Angeles
41
40
Seattle
37
48
———
Thursday’s Games
Pct
.650
.568
.537
.358
.275
Pct
.650
.550
.474
.346
.342
Pct
.610
.556
.531
.506
.435
GB
—
6½
9
23½
30
GB
—
8
14
24½
24
GB
—
4½
6½
8½
14½
Tampa Bay 5, Minnesota 2, 18 innings
Texas 3, Detroit 1
Milwaukee 4, Seattle 2
Pittsburgh 10, Houston 0
Friday’s Games
Cleveland (Clevinger 1-1) at Baltimore
(Means 6-4), 4:05 p.m.
Kansas City (Duff y 3-3) at Toronto (TBD),
4:07 p.m.
Texas (Lynn 9-4) at Tampa Bay (Chirinos
7-3), 4:10 p.m.
Washington (Sanchez 3-6) at Detroit
(Norris 2-6), 4:10 p.m.
Minnesota (Berrios 8-3) at Chicago White
Sox (TBD), 5:10 p.m.
Seattle (TBD) at Houston (Miley 6-4),
5:10 p.m.
Oakland (Fiers 7-3) at L.A. Angels (Pena
5-2), 7:07 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees vs. Boston, 10:10 a.m.
Cleveland at Baltimore, 1:05 p.m.
Kansas City at Toronto, 1:07 p.m.
Texas at Tampa Bay, 1:10 p.m.
Washington at Detroit, 1:10 p.m.
Minnesota at Chicago White Sox,
1:12 p.m.
Seattle at Houston, 5:15 p.m.
Oakland at L.A. Angels, 7:07 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East
Atlanta
Philadelphia
Washington
New York
Miami
Central
Chicago
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
West
Los Angeles
Colorado
Arizona
W
48
43
40
37
30
W
44
43
40
38
36
W
55
42
41
L
34
38
40
45
49
L
37
38
39
41
42
L
27
38
41
Pct
.585
.531
.500
.451
.380
Pct
.543
.531
.506
.481
.462
Pct
.671
.525
.500
GB
—
4½
7
11
16½
GB
—
1
3
5
6½
GB
—
12
14
San Diego
40 40 .500
14
San Francisco 34 45 .430 19½
———
Thursday’s Games
Philadelphia 6, N.Y. Mets 3
Milwaukee 4, Seattle 2
Pittsburgh 10, Houston 0
Chicago Cubs 9, Atlanta 7
Washington 8, Miami 5
Friday’s Games
Atlanta (Soroka 8-1) at N.Y. Mets
(deGrom 4-6), 4:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Hamels 6-2) at Cincinnati
(Gray 3-5), 4:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Velasquez 2-4) at Miami
(Hernandez 0-2), 4:10 p.m.
Washington (Sanchez 3-6) at Detroit
(Norris 2-6), 4:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Archer 3-6) at Milwaukee
(Chacin 3-8), 5:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 9-1) at Colorado (Sen-
zatela 6-5), 5:40 p.m.
St. Louis (Wacha 5-3) at San Diego (Lauer
5-7), 7:10 p.m.
Arizona (Kelly 7-7) at San Francisco
(Anderson 2-2), 7:15 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
Atlanta at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Miami, 1:10 p.m.
Washington at Detroit, 1:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 5:15 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 5:15 p.m.
Arizona at San Francisco, 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis at San Diego, 7:10 p.m.
SOCCER
2019 WOMEN’S WORLD CUP
GLANCE
QUARTERFINALS
Thursday, June 27
At Le Havre, France
England 3, Norway 0
Friday, June 28
At Paris
France vs. United States, 12 p.m.
Saturday, June 29
At Valenciennes, France
Italy vs. Netherlands, 6 a.m.
At Rennes, France
Germany vs. Sweden, 9:30 a.m.
SEMIFINALS
Tuesday, July 2
At Lyon, France
England vs. France-United States win-
ner, 12 p.m.
Wednesday, July 3
At Lyon, France
Italy-Netherlands winner vs. Germa-
ny-Sweden winner, 12 p.m.
THIRD PLACE
Saturday, July 6
At Nice, France
Semifi nal losers, 8 a.m.
CHAMPIONSHIP
Sunday, July 7
At Lyon, France
Semifi nal winners, 8 a.m.
EASTERN OREGON
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EAST OREGONIAN • HERMISTON HERALD • BLUE MOUNTAIN EAGLE • WALLOWA COUNTY CHIEFTAIN
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360 Garage Sales
Sale
Saturday 8-1
3112 SW Jay Ave in Pendleton
Wood stove, wake board, pop
up canopys, bikes, tools, cloth-
ing and misc.
Estate Yard Sale
July 1st thru July 5th
8 a.m
45712 Mission Rd.
Pendleton, OR.
IT WILL SELL
EMAIL : CLASSIFIEDS @ EASTOREGONIAN . COM
I N C LASSIFIEDS !
360 Garage Sales
Variety of items! Craft supplies,
quilting fabric, books and more!-
Multi-Family, Clothes, Collect-
ibles, Household Items, Toys105
SE Kirk Ave Pendleton. Satur-
day Only! 9am-3pm
Multi-Family Yard Sale
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday
from 9-4
46511 HORSESHOE LANE IN
PENDLETON
Behind the Lucky 7 trailer park
in mission
Fishing equipment, jewelry
making tools, and things, and
much more!
IT’S WORTH IT! GET A CLASS AD!
Five families yard sale
Baby items, toddler clothing,
quality adult clothing, antiques,
primitives, household items,
horse tack and farm items, farm
house decor, fishing equipment,
and much more for you to come
to see for yourself!
1014 SW Frazer Ave here in
Pendleton.
Saturday 9-4 and Sunday 9-2.
HOMES SELL FAST IN CLASSIFIEDS!
Something for everyone in the Classifieds
360 Garage Sales
360 Garage Sales
Garage Sale
NASCAR items, exercise bike,
household items, brass knick-
knacks, clothing.
Friday 9:00-6:00
Saturday 9:00-4:00
821 SE 9th Street in Pendleton.
Massive Man Sale
Estate Sale
Pool table Brunswick 1949,
golden oak. Washer & dryer.
Roll top desk, SEGA table type
“Frogger” video game. Log
splitter like new. 1978 Ford
F250 runs great.
PTO game winch with 2500 ft of
cable. Foosball table.
Call Don for appointment at
541-276-1862.
Classified Ads work hard for you!
Unique Indoor Sale
We are selling a ton of
jewelry. Vintage, costume and
sterling.
Also a collection of “smalls” and
some more useful items as well.
Come check it out.
8:00 to 3:00 Fri + Sat
June 28th and 29th
3274 SW Perkins
Turn right at Rooster’s
Across from Sunset Ridge.
You don’t want to miss this sale
if you hunt, shoot or reload.
Rifle, pistol, shotgun, cowboy
action and black powder stuff.
Primers, powder, brass, bullets,
dies, bullet molds, scopes,
cronographs, loading tools,
hunting gear & clothing, camp-
ing gear, hand tools.
Saturday June 29th 9am-2pm
648 NW 9th st, Pendleton
Pre-Estate Sale
Saturday, June 29th
8-3
Arts & crafts, professional
wardrobe, pickup tool box,
canning supplies, felted wool,
gardening tools & lots of other
stuff.
Everything must go.
Cash Only
69922 HWY 395 S,
Pendleton
Located between mile
markers 8 & 9 towards Pilot
Rock.
CLASSIFIEDS
360 Garage Sales
Justin and Burks moving and
estate sales. One day only.
Saturday 10 to 3. We must
clear this house! 175 E. 2nd
St. Ione Oregon.
A lot of nice merchandise
left. Four poster Queen bed,
glassware, holiday items,
jewelry, computer desk,
modern oak server, nice
freezer, Garage is full! Last
chance summer sale, Many
great deals, reasonable offers
excepted!
hope to see you all there.
Justin and Burks
YOU’VE GOT TO SEE IT TO
BELIEVE IT!
HUGE Multi-Family Yard Sale.
Friday & Saturday 7am-3pm.
Priced to sell. Quality children’s
clothes and toys.
Furniture. Dishes. Kitchen.
Home Décor.
Camping. Auto. Horse blankets.
And more.
A thousand items plus!
BBQ hotdogs available.
Also 25c lb-40c lb Fuji apples
54193 Sunnyside Rd
in Milton-Freewater - 1 mile
west of M-F Drive-In
It’s worth the trip!
CLASSIFIEDS GET RESULTS!