AROUND THE HORN
NWSL team on the way
COLUMBUS –The National Women’s Soccer League announced on Tuesday that Columbus would be its 18th franchise after the Haslam Sports Group had submitted a bid to bring professional women’s soccer to the state capital.
The team will debut in 2028 and will use ScottsMiracle-Gro Field, the current home of the Columbus Crew, as its home field.
Recently a total of $50 million in public money from the city of Columbus and Franklin County was approved to help the Haslam Sports Group’s bid. That money will be used to upgrade the current Crew stadium with facilities for the women’s soccer team as well as to build a training facility on the site of McCoy Park.
The city of Cleveland had a NWSL expansion bid turned down last year as the league picked Denver instead. Cleveland’s pitch had included a proposed 12,500-seat soccer stadium that was to be built next to Progressive Field.
Middle school meet on tap
COLUMBIANA — The 41st Columbiana County Middle School Track and Field Meet will be held Wednesday at Crestview High School.
Action is scheduled to start at 4:30 p.m. with the boys discus and high jump, girls shot put and long jump and 3200-meter relay. The rest of the running events will start at 5:15 p.m.
Schools competing are host Crestview, Beaver Local, Columbiana, East Liverpool, East Palestine, Heartland Christian, Leetonia, Lisbon, Salem, Southern, United and Wellsville.
Pirates fall in Texas
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Kumar Rocker allowed a run in six innings and Evan Carter drove in the tying run before robbing Oneil Cruz of a three-run homer, leading the Texas Rangers to a 5-1 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday night.
Cruz singled leading off the game against Rocker (1-1). He stole second and took an extra base on Danny Jansen’s throwing error. Ryan O’Hearn singled for a 1-0 lead two batters into the game.
Joc Pederson singled leading off the second against Carmen Mlodzinski (1-1) and Josh Jung doubled him to third. Carter singled to tie it and Josh Smith hit a sacrifice fly to put the Rangers up 2-1.
Carter then robbed Cruz of a three-run homer in the fifth to keep it 2-1.
Eqequiel Duran, who came in after left fielder Wyatt Langford left with forearm stiffness, had an RBI double in the Rangers’ fifth and Corey Seager ended Mlodzinski’s night with an RBI single for a 4-1 lead. Wilber Dotel entered and gave up a single to Jake Burger before walking Pederson. Jung drove in Seager on a forceout for the final run.
Rocker threw 88 pitches and allowed four hits and a walk, striking out five. Cole Winn, Jacob Latz and Jakob Junis each pitched a scoreless inning to close it out.
Mlodzinski threw 93 pitches and surrendered all five runs on six hits and two walks. He fanned six.
The Rangers (12-11) moved a game over .500 at the start of a nine-game homestand after playing 16 of their first 22 games on the road.
Pittsburgh dropped to 5-5 on the road and 13-10 for the season.
Langford was the Rangers’ hottest hitter before his injury, going 7 for 14 as Texas dropped two of three in Seattle before coming home. He walked and stole his third base in the first inning and left after striking out in the third.
DeLauter helps Guardians
CLEVELAND (AP) — Chase DeLauter has gone through extremes during his first month in the majors.
The Cleveland Guardians rookie started the season on fire with five home runs in his first seven regular-season games.
DeLauter went into a slump after a seventh-inning, two-run homer against the Chicago Cubs during Cleveland’s home opener on April 3. Before Tuesday night’s game against the Houston Astros, he was mired in a 7-for-47 slump.
DeLauter might have gotten his season back on track with a go-ahead, three-run triple in the eighth inning that propelled Cleveland to an 8-5 victory.
DeLauter was 0 for 3 when he came up with one out and the bases loaded, with the Guardians trailing 4-3. On a 2-2 count, he lined a fastball over the middle of the plate from Houston’s Bryan King down the left-field line.
Brice Matthews tried to make a diving stop on the ball, but it was beyond his glove and dropped before rattling into the left-field corner. Angel Martínez, Bryan Rocchio and Steven Kwan scored as DeLauter slid into third with his first career triple.
“At the end of the day, trying to be myself. But big situation, one out, trying to get a ball forward,” DeLauter said about the game-winning hit. “I was looking for a heater. I got a couple there that I fouled off, but just trying to battle and get something out there. I got the pitch to hit.”
The hit was huge for DeLauter and the Guardians, who were 0-10 when trailing after seven innings before scoring six in the eighth to improve to 4-2 on their current homestand.
“It’s no secret he hasn’t gotten results, but this kid’s a good hitter,” manager Stephen Vogt said. “Good hitters use the whole field, and cool moment for him. Obviously, a huge hit for us. We needed a comeback win like that tonight.”
DeLauter was the first Cleveland player to make his major league debut in last year’s AL Wild Card series against Detroit. In his first seven regular-season games, he batted .346 (9 for 26) with five home runs and eight RBIs.
Things got more difficult as opposing pitchers changed their strategy against DeLauter, whose batting average had dropped to .211 when he came up in the eighth inning.
Despite the rough stretch, Vogt kept confidence in DeLauter and didn’t remove him from the lineup. The third-year manager also kept DeLauter in the two spot, between AL All-Stars Steven Kwan and José Ramírez.
“The game moves fast. You get off to a hot start and teams want to figure out how to shut that down,” DeLauter said. “I think the big thing is not falling into those adjustments and wondering why it’s happening and what’s going wrong.
“I feel like a lot of guys, younger guys start to have those thoughts roll in and to hear from the team that they believe in you to have you out there, it’s a good feeling.”
The one thing DeLauter has been consistent with is producing in the eighth inning or later. He is 6 for 19 with two homers and seven RBIs in the late innings.
Despite hitting in front of Ramírez, DeLauter said that it hasn’t been a hindrance.
“Of course I want to get José up there with runners on as much as possible, I mean, that’s the goal, but I think when I’m putting too much pressure on myself, or I’m ignoring some of this stuff too, it doesn’t put me in the best spot. So I think the best thing I can do is go up to the plate with all the confidence and just be myself in any situation in the game,” DeLauter said.
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AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

