Southwest Airlines’ decision to ground its Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft is impacting flights across the country. Officials at Pittsburgh International Airport say it will experience service reductions this coming summer. Southwest is trimming its summer flight schedules from June 8 through 29. The Pittsburgh routes impacted by the adjustments included suspended non-stop service to Los Angeles, Cancun, and a reduction in service to Las Vegas. It’s unclear what changes will be made beyond June.
Author: Beaver County Radio
Two Men Behind Bars After Drug Bust On Pennsylvania Turnpike
Two men are behind bars after a drug bust on the Pennsylvania Turnpike. State troopers say 75 pounds of marijuana were seized yesterday morning during a traffic stop at the New Stanton interchange. The drugs have a street value of more than 200-thousand-dollars. Troopers say the reason why they pulled them over in the first place – the driver failed to use his turn signal.
Beaver County Employees Walk The Picket Line
Several dozen Beaver County employees are walking the picket line protesting a proposed new contract. The informational picket happened Tuesday during the employee’s lunch breaks for those working in county row offices as well as court-appointed and court-related nonprofessionals. The union representing those 220 employees is unhappy with the three-year contract being offered. County officials say union reps are misleading their members with false information on the proposed contract.
Ambridge Police Chief James Mann In Court For Preliminary Hearing Today
AMBRIDGE POLICE CHIEF JAMES MANN IS BACK IN THE COURTROOM THIS MORNING FOR HIS PRELIMINARY HEARING ON SEVERAL CHARGES. BEAVER COUNTY RADIO NEWS CORRESPONDENT SANDY GIORDANO HAS MORE. Click on ‘play’ to hear Sandy’s report…
Police Investigating Shooting In New Castle
Police in New Castle are investigating a late-night shooting that damaged a car and a home. Neighbors say they heard at least 15 shots around 9:30 last night. Police found a car with a bullet hole on Cumberland Avenue. A home on North Crawford Avenue was also struck. The homeowner says a bullet went into the home and through several rooms. No one was injured.
Commissioners Make Proclamation Honoring Emergency Telecommunications Workers
At the Commissioners’ weekly work session on Wednesday, a proclamation was announced for National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week. Matt Drzik has more in this story:
Commissioner Tony Amadio is expected to be at Thursday’s public meeting where the proclamation is expected to be signed by the trio of Commissioners.
Two Very Warm Days Ahead In Beaver County
WEATHER FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17TH, 2019
TODAY – GENERALLY CLOUDY. HIGH – 73.
TONIGHT – CLOUDY. LOW – 56.
WEDNESDAY – OVERCAST. HIGH NEAR 80.
Senior Day at Beaver County Nissan Today, April 17, 2019
Join 1230 WBVP and 1460 WMBA April 17, 2019 at Beaver County Nissan for Senior Day. Frank Sparks host of Teleforum and Ed Hermick will be broadcasting live from 10 a.m. to 12 noon. There will be lots of fun and prizes. The personality prize wheel will also make an appearance as well.
- Beaver County Nissan is also having an oil change special for your vehicle. So stop out and join all the fun !!!
Marte’s homer in 10th inning lifts Pirates over Tigers 5-3
Marte’s homer in 10th inning lifts Pirates over Tigers 5-3
By NOAH TRISTER AP Baseball Writer
DETROIT (AP) — Starling Marte dropped down a sacrifice bunt in the fifth inning of Pittsburgh’s game against Detroit. Not exactly the norm for the slugging outfielder — but a sign of how much he’s struggled early this season.
Later, with the score tied in the 10th, it was time to swing away.
Marte’s two-run homer lifted the Pirates to a 5-3 victory over the Tigers on Tuesday night. It was only the second home run of the season for Marte, who is hitting .213.
“You saw him take the game in his own hands earlier and put down a bunt. There’s no bunt sign on. He wanted to bunt,” manager Clint Hurdle said. “He put down the bunt the one time, and then had a couple punchouts. And then, what a sweet swing.”
Jung Ho Kang also went deep for Pittsburgh, which blew a 3-0 lead but recovered to win when Marte hit a two-out drive off Shane Greene (0-1). Detroit’s closer hadn’t allowed a run all season.
“Breaking ball,” Marte said. “Slider, I think. Gave me a pitch right in the middle. Didn’t try to do too much. Just tried to hit the ball up the middle.”
Keone Kela (1-0) gave up a tying single by Jeimer Candelario in the ninth, but Nick Kingham was able to close out the Tigers in the 10th for his first career save.
Pittsburgh starter Joe Musgrove permitted his first two earned runs of the season but was otherwise impressive. He yielded six hits and a walk while striking out six in seven innings.
Tigers starter Matthew Boyd struck out the side in the first but eventually allowed three runs in seven innings.
Pittsburgh opened the scoring on an RBI infield single by Pablo Reyes in the second. With runners on first and third and two outs, Reyes hit a weak grounder to first baseman Miguel Cabrera, who looked to throw to second for a force, only to realize he had no play there. That initial reaction also cost him any chance of a play at first.
The Tigers wasted an opportunity in the third when Gordon Beckham hit a leadoff double and Grayson Greiner followed with a single. Beckham was sent home on Greiner’s hit and was thrown out at the plate by Reyes from left field.
“When the ball is hit to the left side, you freeze for a second to make sure it gets through, because you don’t want to run into an out,” Beckham said. “We wanted to force the issue and he made a great throw.”
Kang’s two-run homer in the fourth made it 3-0. He’s just 6 for 42 on the season, but two of those hits are home runs.
The Tigers scored two runs in their half of the fourth. Cabrera came home on a passed ball, and Christin Stewart hit an RBI double.
Musgrove had allowed no earned runs in 15 1/3 innings entering the game.
Pittsburgh closer Felipe Vázquez, who pitched two innings at Washington on Sunday, was given the night off.
FAMILIAR FACE
Josh Harrison, who went from the Pirates to the Tigers in the offseason via free agency, went hitless against his former team.
“I’ve got guys over there that I played with, a lot of good friendships, but there’s no added motivation or anything,” Harrison said before the game. “As far as I’m concerned, they’re another opponent — trying to win a series.”
Detroit also added former Pittsburgh infielder Jordy Mercer, but he’s on the injured list right now after straining his quad.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Pirates: Reinstated RHP Kyle Crick (right triceps) from the 10-day injured list and optioned INF Kevin Kramer to Triple-A Indianapolis.
Tigers: Nicholas Castellanos (toe) played for the first time since Wednesday, going 1 for 5 as the DH.
UP NEXT
Pirates: RHP Trevor Williams (1-0) starts Wednesday night in the finale of this two-game series. Williams threw six no-hit innings in a win at Detroit last April.
Tigers: Spencer Turnbull (0-2) takes the mound for Detroit.
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Follow Noah Trister at www.Twitter.com/noahtrister
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More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
Islanders finish off Penguins 3-1 for stunning playoff sweep
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The New York Islanders’ turnaround season is heading to the second round of the playoffs.
Jordan Eberle scored for the fourth straight game, Robin Lehner stopped 32 shots and the Islanders finished off Sidney Crosby and the Pittsburgh Penguins with a clinical 3-1 win in Game 4 on Tuesday night to pull off a stunning sweep.
Josh Bailey set up Brock Nelson’s go-ahead goal late in the first period and added an empty-net score with 38 seconds remaining as the Islanders easily captured the franchise’s second playoff series victory in 26 years.
The Islanders trailed for less than five minutes across four games against the Penguins, whose 13th straight postseason appearance ended quietly. Pittsburgh managed just six goals in the series, including Jake Guentzel’s first of the postseason 35 seconds into the game.
It wasn’t nearly enough to stop the Islanders. New York allowed the fewest goals in the league during the regular season, and then backed it up with 12-plus periods of sound hockey that’s quickly become their calling card under first-year coach Barry Trotz, who led the Washington Capitals to the Stanley Cup last season.
The Penguins did their best to stay loose while trying to avoid getting swept in the first round for the second time in franchise history. Typically buttoned-down coach Mike Sullivan cracked a joke after Tuesday’s morning skate and did little to tinker with his lineup, adamant Pittsburgh could pick itself up off the mat if it got back to — as Sullivan so often puts it — “playing the right way.”
The team that began the playoffs with hopes of capturing its third Stanley Cup in four years looked ready to bounce back. For a couple of minutes anyway.
Guentzel found space in the slot and ripped a shot past Lehner 35 seconds into the game for the first goal of the series by Pittsburgh’s top line. The 574th consecutive home sellout crowd buzzed. The Penguins had the momentum and the lead.
Just as they did at every critical point during what became a lopsided series, the Islanders responded almost immediately.
Penguins defenseman Kris Letang whiffed while trying to pinch into the New York zone, creating a 2-on-1 the other way that Eberle finished to even it at 1 just 1:34 after Guentzel had put Pittsburgh in front.
The goal seemed to steady the Islanders, who settled in and kept it simple. New York posted the franchise’s best regular-season record in 35 years by limiting chances and relying heavily on Trotz’s system that preaches pragmatism and patience.
The Islanders weathered Pittsburgh’s early push and went ahead with 1:54 to go in the first period when Nelson slipped behind Penguins forward Garrett Wilson and darted to the net. Bailey’s pass from the below the goal line arrived right as Nelson flashed in front of Pittsburgh goaltender Matt Murray. Nelson flicked a shot over Murray’s right pad, and New York was back in control.
Another stellar defensive effort and a little bit of puck luck helped. Crosby hit the inside of the left post in the middle of the second period, and Islanders defenseman Scott Mayfield bailed out Lehner by making a save with his left leg on a point-blank shot by Phil Kessel early in the third.
And that was it. When Bailey’s flip went the length of the ice and into the empty net, the Islanders’ bench erupted and the Penguins trudged toward an offseason that could lead to significant changes.
NOTES: Crosby’s assist on Guentzel’s goal moved him past Hall of Famer Steve Yzerman and into 10th place on the NHL’s all-time playoff points list (186). … Pittsburgh went 0 for 3 on the power play and finished 1 for 11 in the series with the man advantage. … The Islanders were 0 for 3 on the power play. … Lehner stopped 135 of the 141 shots he faced in the series. … Murray finished with 23 saves.
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