Realmuto powers Phillies to 12-3 rout of Pirates
By AARON BRACY Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Rhys Hoskins did more with less.
The slumping slugger doubled, tripled and drove in a run as the Philadelphia Phillies got 17 hits in a 12-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Wednesday night.
Hoskins has been struggling mightily at the plate this month and made a game-changing error in the ninth inning of Philadelphia’s 5-4 loss Tuesday night. Phillies manager Gabe Kapler considered giving Hoskins a day off Wednesday before putting him in the cleanup spot — and it paid off.
“It looked like Rhys had a lot of weight lifted off his shoulders,” Kapler said.
Hoskins, who entered in a 2-for-20 slide, said he swung at “80 percent” effort in an attempt to control the barrel of his bat better.
“I throttled down even more than usual and it got me back to where I wanted to be,” he said.
Every position player who started for the Phillies finished with at least one hit and RBI.
J.T. Realmuto had three hits and a home run, Cesar Hernandez added three hits and three RBIs, and Corey Dickerson also went deep. Philadelphia remained two games behind the Chicago Cubs for the second NL wild card.
“We attacked from the get-go and never let off the gas,” Hoskins said.
Starling Marte homered and had three hits for Pittsburgh, and Josh Bell hit a two-run shot.
Pirates rookie Bryan Reynolds, who began the day leading the NL in batting, went 0 for 3 to snap his seven-game hitting streak and drop his average to .330.
Vince Velasquez (6-7) bounced back from a forgettable outing last time out, going five innings and allowing two runs on five hits with five strikeouts and no walks. Velasquez coughed up a 7-0 lead in the third inning of Philadelphia’s 19-11 loss at Miami last Friday.
Kapler didn’t give Velasquez the opportunity to blow a lead this time, lifting the right-hander for a pinch-hitter in the fifth even though he had thrown only 75 pitches.
“I knew I needed to make an impact,” Velasquez said. “Today was a pretty important game for me and the team in general.”
Mitch Keller (1-3), a 23-year-old rookie making his seventh career start, pitched into the fifth for Pittsburgh and gave up eight runs on 11 hits with eight strikeouts and a walk.
The Phillies did damage against the 2014 second-round pick in the fifth when Keller didn’t get an out while facing six batters, five of whom scored. Dickerson started the inning with an opposite-field homer to left. Realmuto followed with a triple and scored on Bryce Harper’s single. After a walk to Hoskins and an infield single by Jean Segura, Hernandez ended Keller’s night with a two-run single.
“The overall effect of execution of pitches caught up to him,” Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said. “Mix wasn’t sharp.”
All told, Philadelphia tallied five runs on five hits in the inning to go up 8-2.
Marte led off the sixth by crushing a long homer to left, but Realmuto answered in the bottom half with a drive to left of his own.
Bell hit a two-run drive to the opposite field in left in the fourth, giving him 34 homers and 106 RBIs. Bell began the day second in the NL in RBIs, one behind Atlanta’s Freddie Freeman.
BIG SERIES
Realmuto finished the three-game set 8 for 15 with a double, triple and homer.
PHILLY PHUN
Marte has reached base safely in all 19 career games in Philadelphia, batting .375 (27 for 72) with nine doubles, three homers and 10 RBIs.
UP NEXT
Pirates: Open a four-game set Thursday night at Colorado with RHP Trevor Williams (6-6, 5.35 ERA) facing Rockies RHP Chi Chi Gonzalez (0-5, 6.43).
Phillies: After an off day, begin a three-game home series Friday against the Mets with Philadelphia RHP Aaron Nola (12-4, 3.53 ERA) opposing RHP Zack Wheeler (9-7, 4.46).
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More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
Author: Beaver County Radio
Presidential Candidate Dr. Jerome Segal To Be On A.M. Beaver County
The man behind the socialist Bread & Roses party who recently announced his candidacy for U.S. President will join Matt Drzik by phone on A.M. Beaver County to discuss his political philosophies and differentiation from the other current candidates. The interview will be after the 8:30 news on Beaver County Radio.
CCBC Players Of The Game: Saturday August 31, 2019
Saturday, August 31, 2019:
| WBVP/WMBA and 99.3 FM
Southside- Trenton Seik |
The 24th Annual Good Samaritan Parish Festival Begins August 29
It’s a cavalcade of music, food, worship, and fun…just as it has been for nearly a quarter-century.
The Good Samaritan Parish Festival returns to Ambridge for Labor Day Weekend, and Rose Filipponi and Leah Lesak gave a preview of the weekend’s festivities on A.M. Beaver County with Matt Drzik. The four-day festival includes live entertainment, homemade meals, snacks, and desserts…and the famous polka mass on Saturday night. Plus there will be a dance floor, prize giveaways, and an hourly 50/50.
A full list of what to expect from the 24th Annual Good Samaritan Parish festival can be viewed here.
To listen to the interview with Rose, Leah, and Matt…click on the player below!
Budgets, Guns, & Lawsuits: The August 28 Work Session
(Matt Drzik/Beaver County Radio)
The Commissioners’ work session at the Beaver County Courthouse ran through a bevy of notable topics during their delayed session on Wednesday; delayed due to a prior 8:30 meeting with the Beaver County Conservation District running late due to an extended public participation.
When the Commissioners did arrive and Chairman Dan Camp called the session to order, the BOC was presented with an update on the County Budget by financial advisor Corey Troutman. Troutman said that though the County is still in solid shape financially, more work needs done in order to be comfortable:
Also discussed at the meeting was the new storage area in the County Courthouse for confiscated guns seized in arrests and indictments. Commissioner Sandie Egley had some concerns about the necessity for such an area as well as which guns would be confiscated; such concerns were echoed by Commissioner Tony Amadio as well. But District Attorney David Lozier reaffirmed the necessity of the new gun storage area, as well as clarifying a couple concerns:
Towards the end of the meeting (instead of the usual middle), Solicitor Garen Fedeles addressed his report, including the possibility that Beaver County could be heading to court with several other Pennsylvania counties in an ongoing lawsuit against Johnson & Johnson:
The announcement by Fedeles comes on the heels of the ruling earlier this week against Johnson & Johnson in Oklahoma that will cost the company over $500 million dollars (pending appeal).
Dr. Jerome Segal announced his presidential candidacy as the nominee of the newly formed Bread and Roses Party!!
At the National Press Club this morning, Dr. Jerome Segal announced his presidential candidacy as the nominee of the newly formed Bread and Roses Party, (www.BreadandRoses.US), and Dr. Segal also articulated the basics of a new political outlook called: Bread and Roses Socialism.
Dr. Segal is a philosopher and internationally known conflict resolution practitioner. In 1987 he was part of the first delegation of Jewish-Americans to open dialogue with Yasser Arafat and the PLO leadership in Tunis. In 2006 Segal carried a message of moderation from Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh to President George Bush, in which the Hamas leader sought an opportunity to govern, having just won the Palestinian elections.
At the press conference, Segal revealed that he has been in dialogue with the Iranian government, including a long meeting with Iran’s foreign minister and believes it is possible to achieve a re-set in US/Iran relations and US/Israeli relations. He said, “The key is achieving a just peace between Israel and the Palestinians.” He then laid out a detailed policy proposal that included a US defense treaty with Israel, admission of Palestine to the UN, and a US Embassy to Palestine in East Jerusalem. He would end aid to Israel in the advent of an annexation of the West Bank.
Segal’s academic work has centered on the intersection of philosophy and economics, and he is the author of Graceful Simplicity: The Philosophy and Politics of the Alternative American Dream. In 2018, he challenged Senator Ben Cardin in the Maryland primary and then went on to found The Bread and Roses Party.
Segal characterizes himself as a utopian socialist. Speaking of his candidacy he said, “We are a party of ideas. We do not expect to supplant either of the two parties, but rather to change the American conversation. We see electoral politics as the primary free speech arena in America. It is the time when Americans are listening and thinking. We hope to be intellectual yeast.”
“Based on my experience in the Senate campaign, I am convinced that Americans are deeply hungry for a new way of thinking of our economic life and how it relates to the deeper aspects of human happiness. Most of us understand that what we are doing to ourselves and our children does not make sense, yet we feel caught.”
“For most people, their American Dream is not to get to the top of the pyramid. It is to have very secure income sufficient for meeting basic needs, and to have the ability to choose meaning over money, and to have more leisure to do those things in life that are most important.”
The Bread and Roses policy agenda includes:
– A major redistribution of income and wealth leading to broad equality of condition.
– Democratic ownership of the means of production, whereby the bottom 90% of Americans would own 75% of corporate America.
– A guarantee of employment.
– Income sufficient to meet the needs of a simpler lifestyle, no matter how one made one’s living.
– Increased leisure.
Segal said, “We can bring these goals together with a new definition of economic progress as the sustained decline in Need Required Labor Time – that is, how many hours someone has to work in order to meet basic needs.”
“If we can secure the minimum for a simple life, people will choose meaning over money, and we will re-purpose schooling towards education in history, humanities and the arts, and free our children from the ever-worsening competition for a limited supply of so-called good jobs. We can ensure a right to a childhood.”
The Bread and Rose perspective is detailed at www.SegalforPresident.org
Ethiopian Fossil Reveals Face for Ancestor of Famed ‘Lucy’
NEW YORK (AP) — A fossil from Ethiopia is giving scientists their best look yet at a presumed ancestor of the famed ancient skeleton nicknamed Lucy. It’s 3.8 million years old, and it contains much of the face and skull. The find was reported Wednesday in the journal Nature.
US, Mexico Widen Asylum Crackdown to Push Back All Migrants
NUEVO LAREDO, Mexico (AP) — A Trump administration program forcing asylum seekers to wait in Mexico has evolved into a sweeping rejection of all forms of migrants. Both countries are working to keep people out of the U.S. despite threats to their safety. The results serve the goals of both governments, which have targeted illegal immigration at the behest of President Donald Trump. He threatened Mexico with tariffs to force action. Some people sent to wait in Mexican border cities say they never requested asylum.
Citing Health, Georgia GOP Sen. Isakson Says He’ll Retire
WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican Sen. Johnny Isakson of Georgia says he’ll retire at the end of 2019, citing what he calls “health challenges.” The three-term senator was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2013 and suffered a fall in July, according to his office. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp will appoint someone to fill the seat when Isakson steps down in December. That’ll set up a rare situation in November 2020 when both of Georgia’s Senate seats will be on the ballot.
Tropical Storm Dorian Expected to Strengthen, Could Hit Puerto Rico
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Puerto Rico is facing its first major test of emergency preparedness since the 2017 devastation of Hurricane Maria as Tropical Storm Dorian nears the U.S. territory at near-hurricane force. And forecasters say it could grow to Category 3 status as it nears the U.S. mainland as early as the weekend. The U.S. and British Virgin Islands are also in its path, with landslides, widespread flooding and power outages possible in Puerto Rico.


















