Monday, June 30, 2014

Nashville Sounds destroy New Orleans Zephyrs 13-0 - Clarksville Online





Nashville SoundsNashville, TN - The Nashville Sounds (42-41) offense exploded for 13 runs before 7,879 fans at Greer Stadium in Saturday night’s 13-0 shutout victory over the first-place New Orleans Zephyrs.


The 13 runs by Sounds batters matches a season-high and the 13-run deficit is the largest since a 19-0 shutout at Colorado Springs in game one of doubleheader on August 4th, 2011.


Nashville Sounds defeat New Orleans 13-0 at Greer Stadium (Mateen Sidiq Nashville Sports Network)

Nashville Sounds defeat New Orleans 13-0 at Greer Stadium (Mateen Sidiq Nashville Sports Network)




Hunter Morris, 2-for-4, got Nashville on the board in the 1st inning with a two-out single into left field. Later, the 25-year-old slugger connected for a two-run triple in the Sounds’ five-run 5th inning to give Nashville a 4-0 advantage.

Sean Halton, who matched a career-best four-hit night with two doubles and two singles, drove in Morris with a base-knock into left field. The Sounds continued for five runs in the fifth inning to make it 7-0 in favor of the home team.


Starting pitcher Taylor Jungmann (4-4) helped keep the Zephyrs off the board by delivering seven scoreless innings to secure his fourth win with the Sounds. The 24-year-old right-hander limited the Z’s to two hits on the night, struck out eight batters, and escaped a bases-loaded one-out jam in the 4th inning with a strikeout followed by a groundout.


Jungmann has worked quality starts in each of his last two outings and improves his Greer Stadium record to 3-1 with a 2.59 ERA (7er/24.1ip). He helped his own cause by plating two Nashville runners with a single to right field in the 5th.


Pinch hitter Kevin Mattison batted for Jungmann in the 7th inning and drove a three-run triple to dead centerfield to give Nashville a 10-run advantage. Mattison came in to score via a Pete Orr infield single.


Newcomer Jason Rogers kept the six-run inning alive with a monster home run to dead center field, which scored two. In his first two Triple-A games, Rogers has a home run, triple, double and four RBIs.


Outfielder Caleb Gindl also contributed to the Sounds run column with his RBI single in the 4th inning, scoring Halton.


[320leftRelievers Arcenio Leon and Donovan Hand each pitched an inning of relief work to preserve the Sounds’ PCL-leading 7th shutout of the year. It is the first time Nashville has recorded back-to-back shut out victories since June 2009.


The Sounds will look to win the series against New Orleans in Sunday’s finale at 6:35pm. RHP Michael Blazek (0-3, 4.75) will take the hill for Nashville opposite the Z’s LHP Brad Hand (2-0, 2.33). Broadcaster Jeff Hem has the call on 102.5 The Game.


Box Score


Nashville Sounds (42-41) 13, New Orleans Zephyrs (43-39) 0

June 28, 2014

















































123456789RHE
New Orleans Zephyrs000000000020
Nashville Sounds10015060x13141












































































































































































New OrleansABRHRBIBBSOLOBAVG
Valdespin, CF3000121.271
Rodriguez, J, 3B-2B4000022.272
Canha, LF3010102.303
Bour, 1B4010011.329
Jensen, RF3000110.271
Diaz, SS4000013.283
Black, Da, 2B3000003.167
Olmos, P0000000.000
Skipworth, C2000010.202
Conley, A, P2000021.000
Cargill, P0000000.000
Krick, 3B1000011.143
Totals2902031114.264
BATTING

2B: Canha (17, Jungmann).

TB: Canha 2; Bour.

Runners left in scoring position, 2 out: Black, Da 2; Canha.

GIDP: Valdespin.

Team RISP: 1-for-5.

Team LOB: 6.













































































































































































NashvilleABRHRBIBBSOLOBAVG
Orr, 2B5121012.300
Velez, LF3300101.315
Rogers, J, 3B5112013.375
Morris, H, 1B5123010.273
Leon, Ar, P0000000.000
Hand, D, P0000000.000
Halton, RF-1B5241010.274
Pagnozzi, C4210102.220
Gindl, CF-RF5121035.268
Gomez, H, SS2100201.240
Jungmann, P3012001.333
a-Mattison, PH-CF1113000.196
Totals381314134715.259
a-Tripled for Jungmann in the 7th.
BATTING

2B: Halton 2 (14, Conley, A, Cargill).

3B: Morris, H (1, Conley, A), Mattison (3, Cargill).

HR: Rogers, J (1, 7th inning off Olmos, 1 on, 2 out).

TB: Pagnozzi; Jungmann; Orr 2; Mattison 3; Rogers, J 4; Halton 6; Morris, H 4; Gindl 2.

RBI: Morris, H 3 (36), Gindl (20), Halton (29), Jungmann 2 (3), Mattison 3 (21), Orr (22), Rogers, J 2 (4).

2-out RBI: Morris, H; Jungmann 2; Rogers, J 2.

Runners left in scoring position, 2 out: Gindl 2; Orr.

Team RISP: 9-for-14.

Team LOB: 6.BASERUNNING

SB: Orr (6, 2nd base off Conley, A/Skipworth).FIELDING

E: Mattison (4, fielding).

DP: (Orr-Morris, H).






























































New OrleansIPHRERBBSOHRERA
Conley, A (L, 2-3)4.29773305.08
Cargill1.234411010.80
Olmos1.22220314.50
Totals 8.01413134714.18





























































NashvilleIPHRERBBSOHRERA
Jungmann (W, 4-4)7.02002805.14
Leon, Ar1.00001205.11
Hand, D1.00000105.59
Totals 9.020031103.61





WP: Conley, A, Olmos, Leon, Ar.

HBP: Skipworth (by Jungmann), Velez (by Conley, A).

Pitches-strikes: Conley, A 91-61, Cargill 30-19, Olmos 36-26, Jungmann 94-56, Leon, Ar 25-15, Hand, D 6-5.

Groundouts-flyouts: Conley, A 6-1, Cargill 3-0, Olmos 1-0, Jungmann 8-3, Leon, Ar 1-1, Hand, D 1-0.

Batters faced: Conley, A 27, Cargill 9, Olmos 7, Jungmann 25, Leon, Ar 5, Hand, D 3.

Inherited runners-scored: Cargill 2-0, Olmos 1-1.

Umpires: HP: Shaun Lampe. 1B: Thomas Newsom. 3B: Brian Hertzog.

Weather: 88 degrees, partly cloudy.

Wind: 8 mph, R to L.

T: 3:08.

Att: 7,879.

Venue: Herschel Greer Stadium.

June 28, 2014





Sections


Sports

Topics


Arcenio Leon, Baseball, Brad Hand, Caleb Gindl, Colorado Springs, Donovan Hand, Greer Stadium, Hunter Morris, Jason Rogers, Jeff Hem, Kevin Mattison, Michael Blazek, Nashville, Nashville Sounds, Nashville Sounds Baseball, Nashville Tennessee, Nashville TN, New Orleans, New Orleans Zephyrs, Pcific Coast League, PCL, Pete Orr, Sean Halton, Sounds, Taylor Jungmann, Tennessee, Triple-A, Zephyrs







Clarksville Police discover Skeletal Remains off Power Street - Clarksville Online





Clarksville Police Department - CPDClarksville, TN – On Saturday, June 28th, 2014 at 11:13am, the Clarksville Police Department responded to a location on Power Street, where skeletal remains were discovered.


CPD Homicide Detectives were called out to investigate this discovery. Gender, age, and race are unknown. This is an ongoing investigation, and there is no further information at this time.



If there is anyone with any information, please contact Detective Chris Nolder at 931.648.0656 Ext. 5341 or, to remain anonymous, call the Crime Stoppers TIPS Hotline at 931.645.TIPS (8477).

Sections


News

Topics


Body found, Chris Nolder, Clarksville, Clarksville Police Department, Clarksville TN, CPD, CPD Homicide Unit, Crime Stoppers, Power Street







Consumers pledge support for the Clarksville Downtown Market - Clarksville Online





Clarksville Downtown MarketClarksville, TN - Pledge your support for your Clarksville Downtown Market! Each pledge made for our market inches us closer to the number one market in the country as a part of the “I Love My Farmers Market Celebration™” hosted by American Farmland Trust.


I Love My Farmers Market Celebration marks the fifth year American Farmland Trust has hosted a summer-long event to honor our nation’s hardworking family farmers and to raise the national awareness about our bountiful farmers markets.


Pledge your support for the Clarksville Downtown Market (Bill Larson Clarksville Online)

Pledge your support for the Clarksville Downtown Market (Bill Larson Clarksville Online)




The celebration encourages consumers to pledge to support family farmers by shopping directly from them this summer.


One pledge equals a commitment to spend $10.00 at the Clarksville Downtown Market that week.


Pledge your support everyday by going to http://ift.tt/1qQ8fh4 and join us at the Clarksville Downtown Market every Saturday from 8:00am to 1:00pm on Public Square. Pledging is underway and will close September 14th, 2014 at midnight EST. Pledges made are not charged to those pledging directly, but are rather a statement that you pledge to visit the Market to shop that week.


Farmers markets provide the vital link between eaters and where our food comes from and as such highlight the importance of preserving farmland. “The I Love My Farmers Market Celebration is about celebrating the unique qualities of farmers markets throughout the nation and the important role that these markets play in keeping family farmers on the land,” said American Farmland Trust Vice President of External Affairs, Susan Sink.


I Love My Farmers Market Celebration is part of the American Farmland Trust’s No Farms No Food® Campaign. Nationwide, the food and farming system contributes nearly $1 trillion dollars to our national economy. According to the most recent National Resources Inventory, we have been losing nearly one million acres of farmland every year. For all of these reasons and more, conserving and protecting farmland for future generations is something we can all celebrate.


Kick off your pledge this Saturday, June 28th from 8:00am to 1:00pm on Public Square and enjoy entertainment provided by Red River Breeze and Kenneth Heidger.


For more details on the I Love My Farmers Market Celebration and pledging for the Clarksville Downtown Market, please contact the Clarksville Parks and Recreation at 931.645.7476 or visit http://ift.tt/1qQ8fh4




Sections


Events

Topics


American Farmland Trust, Clarksville, Clarksville Downtown Market, Clarksville Parks & Recreation Department, Clarksville Parks and Recreation, Clarksville Tennessee, Clarksville TN, Downtown Market, I Love My Farmers Market Celebration, Kenneth Heidger, No Farms No Food, Public Square, Red River Breeze, Susan Sink, Tennessee, http://ift.tt/1qQ8fh4







Clarksville Weekly Market Snapshot from Frazier Allen for the week of June ... - Clarksville Online





F&M Investment Services - Raymond James - Clarksville, TNClarksville, TN – GDP growth was revised to a -2.9% annual rate in the third estimate for 1Q14 (vs. -1.0% in the 2nd estimate and +0.1% in the advance estimate).


Prior estimates showed that a slower rate of inventory accumulation and a wider trade deficit subtracted considerably from overall growth – the third estimate showed a somewhat larger subtraction of 3.2 percentage points from the headline GDP growth figure (Domestic Final Sales, GDP less net exports and the change in inventories, rose at a 0.3% annual rate).


Frazier Allen

Frazier Allen




A decrease (rather than an increase) in consumer spending on healthcare helped push the headline GDP figure lower. Investors were willing to dismiss the bad 1Q14 GDP number. After all, it was at odds with almost all other pieces of economic data, especially nonfarm payrolls and weekly jobless claims. There’s no indication of recession here.

However, personal income and spending figures for May suggested a restrained rebound in 2Q14. Inflation-adjusted consumer spending fell 0.1% in May, following a 0.2% decline in April.


These figures will be revised (annual benchmark revisions to the monthly figures are due on August 1), but taken at face value, they suggest that inflation-adjusted consumer spending (70% of GDP) is tracking at about a 1.4% annual rate – a lot less than was expected a month ago (despite good strength in motor vehicle sales). One major concern heading onto the second half of the year is that average wage gains are barely keeping pace with inflation – that limits the potential improvement in consumer spending growth.


Next week, we get fresh June figures in the holiday-shortened week. The focus is expected to be on the employment report, which has been moved up a day due to Friday’s holiday. Note that seasonal adjustment can be tricky in June, due to the end of the school year – so take any surprises with a grain of salt (they may be reversed in the report for July).


Janet Yellen will speak on “financial stability” to the International Monetary Fund on Wednesday – given the audience, this is unlikely to be a “message to the markets” kind of speech. The markets will close early on Thursday, ahead of the three-day weekend.



Indices









































Last Last Week YTD return %
DJIA16846.1316921.461.63%
NASDAQ4379.054359.3264.85%
S&P 5001957.221959.485.89%
MSCI EAFE1963.271992.692.49%
Russell 20001180.711184.031.47%

Consumer Money Rates

























Last 1-year ago
Prime Rate3.253.25
Fed Funds0.090.08
30-year mortgage4.174.46

Currencies



































Last 1-year ago
Dollars per British Pound1.7031.536
Dollars per Euro1.3611.302
Japanese Yen per Dollar101.72097.710
Canadian Dollars per Dollar1.0711.049
Mexican Peso per Dollar13.01513.252

Commodities




















Last 1-year ago
Crude Oil105.8495.50
Gold1310.001229.32

Bond Rates

























Last 1-month ago
2-year treasury0.450.38
10-year treasury2.522.48
10-year municipal (TEY)3.623.74

Treasury Yield Curve – 6/27/2014


Treasury Yield Curve – 6/27/2014


S&P Sector Performance (YTD) – 6/27/2014


S&P Sector Performance (YTD) – 6/27/2014


Economic Calendar













































June 30th Chicago PM Index (June)

Pending Home Sales Index (May)
July 1st ISM Manufacturing Index (June)

Motor Vehicle Sales (June(

World Cup: Belgium vs. USA (June)
July 2nd ADP Payroll Estimate (June)

Yellen Speaks (“Financial Stability”)
July 3rd Jobless Claims (week ending June 28)

Employment Report (June)

Trade Balance (May)

ISM Non-Manufacturing Index (June)

Early Market Close
July 4th Independence Day Holiday (markets closed)
Mid-July (tbd) Yellen Monetary Policy Testimony
July 30th Real GDP (2Q14 advance and benchmark revisions)

FOMC Policy Decision, (no press conference)
September 17th FOMC Policy Decision, Yellen Press Conference


Important Disclosures



Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. There are special risks involved with global investing related to market and currency fluctuations, economic and political instability, and different financial accounting standards. The above material has been obtained from sources considered reliable, but we do not guarantee that it is accurate or complete. There is no assurance that any trends mentioned will continue in the future. While interest on municipal bonds is generally exempt from federal income tax, it may be subject to the federal alternative minimum tax, state or local taxes. In addition, certain municipal bonds (such as Build America Bonds) are issued without a federal tax exemption, which subjects the related interest income to federal income tax. Investing involves risk and investors may incur a profit or a loss.

US government bonds and treasury bills are guaranteed by the US government and, if held to maturity, offer a fixed rate of return and guaranteed principal value. US government bonds are issued and guaranteed as to the timely payment of principal and interest by the federal government. Treasury bills are certificates reflecting short-term (less than one year) obligations of the US government.


Commodities trading is generally considered speculative because of the significant potential for investment loss. Markets for commodities are likely to be volatile and there may be sharp price fluctuations even during periods when prices overall are rising. Specific sector investing can be subject to different and greater risks than more diversified investments.


Tax Equiv Muni yields (TEY) assume a 35% tax rate on triple-A rated, tax-exempt insured revenue bonds.


Material prepared by Raymond James for use by its financial advisors.


The information contained herein has been obtained from sources considered reliable, but we do not guarantee that the foregoing material is accurate or complete. Data source: Bloomberg, as of close of business June 26th, 2014.


©2014 Raymond James Financial Services, Inc. member FINRA / SIPC.




About Frazier Allen



Frazier Allen


Frazier Allen, WMS, CRPS, Financial Advisor with F&M Bank

50 Franklin Street | Clarksville, TN 37040 | 931-553-2048



Web Site: http://ift.tt/1myZwbA

Email: frazier.allen@raymondjames.com



Sections


Business

Topics


British Pound, Clarksville, Clarksville TN, Crude Oil, DJIA, Euro, F&M Investment Services, Fed, GDP, gold, Iraq, ISM Manufacturing Index, Janet Yellen, Japanese Yen, Mexican Peso, Mortgage Rates, MSCI EAFE, Nasdaq, Oil Prices, Producer Index, Raymond James Investment Services, retail sales, Russell 2000, S&P 500, U.S. Stock Market, Weekly Market Snapshot