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Cardinals promote Roby to Memphis

Cardinals promote Roby to Memphis

Yahoo10-06-2025

ST. LOUIS, Mo–The Springfield Cardinals will open a 12-game home stand Tuesday night starting with six against Tulsa.
But Springfield will do it without one of its top pitchers.
In our Cardinals Nation update, St. Louis promoted right handed starting pitcher Tekoah Roby to Triple AAA Memphis.
The move comes just a few days after St. Louis named Roby it's minor league pitcher of the month of May.
Roby started five games for Springfield in May.
He finished 2-1 with 33 strikeouts in the month.
The righty collected 11 of them against the Amarillo Sod Poodles on May 16th.
Tekoah Roby is 4-2 overall this season with a 2.49 ERA.
Roby came to Springfield in 2023 in a trade with the Texas Rangers.
He was injured most of last season.
Springfield will open a six game series against Tulsa Tuesday night.
Then Corpus Christi will come to Hammons Field June 17th through the 22nd.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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It meant that, despite clocking 20.43s for 200m and repeatedly going sub-47 seconds over 400m as a high school senior, he had to go to Indian Hills junior college for a year. Advertisement There, he worked harder and ran even faster — 44.73s for 400m and sub-20s twice in the 200m, including a heavily wind-assisted 19.49s. 'That's when the agents started hitting me up. I was like, 'I guess I'm going pro now'.' After winning 16 collegiate races in 2019, he first raced as a pro that June. Bednarek describes his 200m at the Rabat Diamond League and a 400m in Ostrava, the Czech Republic, as ''welcome to the pros, rookie' moments'. He was in good shape from his college season but the elites had started later because that year's World Championships in Doha, Qatar, were not until late September. 'I'm looking at the times and I'm like, 'Oh, I'm about to roll everybody up. They're running slow',' he says. 'I got into the race, started running… and started dying. That's when you see zoom, zoom, zoom (as others run past you).' He came fourth in Morocco and sixth in Ostrava. Despite a hamstring issue, and early signs that his competitive edge can spill into over-exertion, he made his first senior U.S. team for the World Championships. 'I actually didn't want to go. (After nationals) I was like, 'OK, I can finally rest, go home, recover the hamstring'. Then they called me and told me I made the team, so I was, like, 'Damn, I've got to keep going'. 'I went to Doha in the mindset of, 'I'm just here for experience'. I didn't even make it past the first round.' He came seventh out of eight in his 200m heat in 21.5s, his slowest time in that distance all year. He is one of the forgotten men from the 100m final in Paris last August, which was his first individual appearance over that distance at a global championships after running a 9.87s PB at U.S. trials to make the team. Lyles edged out Jamaica's Kishane Thompson by five-thousandths to take gold in the deepest men's 100m Olympic final. Bednarek was the fastest seventh-place ever. Advertisement 'Initially, I was quite upset,' he says, 'but after a few days of thinking about it, there were good things. I didn't have the perfect race or execute the way that I wanted to, but I still ran 9.88 — that says a lot about me. 'If I do that under those circumstances, what can I do when I actually stick to my race plan? I kind of wanted it too badly. I tried to do something that I usually don't do and I tensed up. I had a good start and felt like I didn't.' Sprinting might look flat-out from the start but athletes need to build through the phases. 'When I'm more relaxed, then my top-end speed can kick in and I reel people in, but I didn't do that at all in the final. 'I locked up my whole body. My acceleration phase wasn't where it needed to be going to 50m and 60m. I was green, I was the newbie going into the finals, and it was a learning experience.' He learned, too, from the 4x100m relay, where the U.S. men continued their record of disqualifying, further stretching their Olympic medal drought in the event to at least 24 years (since silver at Athens 2004). 'I don't know what happened. We all felt good about it (before the race). I just made a slight mistake.' Bednarek, on the second leg, took off too early as Coleman led off around the bend. They were disqualified for passing the baton outside the changeover zone. 'The thing that will fix all our problems is just consistency in training,' he says. 'If we say, 'Hey, this is the team, we need to start practising a couple months before', then I think everything will be a lot better.' Bednarek's biggest limitation in recent years has been injuries. He reels off a list including pulled hamstrings and a broken toe. Last year, his season featured 24 races across six months. 'A healthy Kenny is a dangerous Kenny, because with me not dealing with all this little BS, I can put everything together and then I'll be dominant,' he says. Advertisement In 2021, he clocked 10 wind-legal, sub-20s 200m performances, the most by any athlete in a single season. 'That just comes with the recovery factor. I'm always going to do a workout, and excel at it, but to survive at this level, you have to take care of your body.' It is why he eats gluten-free and organic now, and has installed a sauna, cold plunge, red-light therapy and a PEMF (pulsed electromagnetic field therapy) machine at home. 'It's a lot of money, but at the end of the day, our body is an investment,' he says. 'Track and field is not forever, so you might as well put the money down, recover and get ready for the next day and try to survive. 'Make money, get gold medals and just run fast.' He can cross 'make money' and 'run fast' off the list this year. Now, for those 'three golds', he just needs to relax.

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