We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Royals jump on Tigers early, cruise to 6-2 win

riggertRoyalsDETROIT (AP) — Alcides Escobar was ready for Anibal Sanchez to throw a fastball on the first pitch of the game.

“I said, `If he throws me a fastball right down the middle, I’m swinging no matter what,” the Kansas City shortstop said.

Escobar hit a leadoff homer and made a sparkling catch of Miguel Cabrera’s line drive two innings later, and the Royals went on to a 6-2 victory over the Detroit Tigers on Saturday. Kansas City moved back into first place in the AL Central after the Tigers had taken a half-game lead by beating the Royals in a sloppily played series opener Friday night.

Jeremy Guthrie (2-2) allowed two runs in 7 1/3 innings for the Royals. Sanchez (2-4) allowed six runs and nine hits in six innings, his ERA rising to 5.44 on the young season.

Sanchez came into the game with a 1.40 ERA in eight career starts against Kansas City, but the Royals were aggressive early and scored all their runs in the first four innings.

Guthrie allowed fewer than three runs for the first time this year.

Escobar belted Sanchez’s first offering well beyond the fence in left field for his first home run of the season. Eric Hosmer added an RBI double that inning, and Kansas City scored two more runs in the second on RBI singles by Escobar and Hosmer.

It was 5-1 in the bottom of the third when Cabrera’s liner was caught by Escobar — the shortstop went diving to his right to make the play.

Omar Infante brought another run home for the Royals with a fourth-inning single.

Detroit’s second run came in the sixth. Victor Martinez led off with a double, and Nick Castellanos sent a two-out drive to right-center that Lorenzo Cain and Jarrod Dyson both tried to catch against the wall. The ball hit the wall in between their gloves and caromed back for a triple that made it 6-2.

“That’s nobody’s ball. That’s a play that nobody can call. There’s no communication there,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “That was in no-man’s land. Not a lot of outfielders get to that ball, and we had two of them at the same time.”

Guthrie allowed eight hits and a walk with three strikeouts in his longest outing of the season.

Kansas City catcher Salvador Perez had his first day off of the season. Drew Butera replaced him behind the plate and went hitless.

Perez had played at least one out at catcher in 55 straight regular-season games, according to STATS. That was the longest streak since Bob Boone of the California Angels had a run of 65 games in 1987-88.

BACK AND FORTH

The Tigers outlasted the Royals by one game to win the AL Central last year, and there hasn’t been much separating the teams in 2015 either.

“I think it’s going to be like that all year long,” Yost said. “It’s just going to be give and take.”

The Royals and Tigers split a four-game series at Kansas City, and they’ve also split the first two of this three-game set.

“They’ve got everything they had last year, but now they’ve got more offense,” Detroit manager Brad Ausmus said. “I think adding a veteran like (designated hitter Kendrys) Morales helped, but they’ve also got a lot of guys who look more polished at the plate.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Closer Greg Holland worked a scoreless ninth in a non-save situation. It was his second appearance since returning from a pectoral injury.

Tigers: Detroit put C Alex Avila on the 15-day DL with a knee injury and said LHP David Price has a mild strain of his right hamstring.

UP NEXT

The Royals will send RHP Chris Young (2-0) to the mound against RHP Shane Greene (3-2) in the series finale Sunday night. Young held the Tigers hitless in five innings on May 1 in his only start of the season so far.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis drops game two of series at Pittsburgh

riggertCardinalsPITTSBURGH (AP) — Jordy Mercer broke out of a deep slump with a go-ahead two-run double and the Pittsburgh Pirates rallied to beat the St. Louis Cardinals 7-5 on Saturday night.

Mercer, who began the day hitting .186, sent a fastball from St. Louis reliever Seth Maness off the wall in center field with one out in the sixth to give the Pirates the lead. Mercer finished with three RBIs, nearly doubling his season total.

Neil Walker added his second homer and the Pirates ended a seven-game losing streak to the Cardinals. Rob Scahill (1-2) earned the win in relief. Mark Melancon worked a perfect ninth for his sixth save.

Matt Holliday went 3 for 4 for the Cardinals. Jhonny Peralta and Jason Heyward added two hits each. Both were on base in the second inning when Yadier Molina hit into the franchise’s first triple play in nearly 12 years. Carlos Martinez (3-1) picked up his first loss after 5 1/3 erratic innings.

Pittsburgh has slogged through the first month of the season and started the night trailing the Cardinals by nine games. The offense that has sputtered for long stretches, however, is starting to come to life. Pittsburgh has 19 runs over its last three games after managing just 15 total during a 1-7 slide that ended on Thursday.

The Pirates took an early 3-0 lead in the second but St. Louis pushed around Pittsburgh starter Vance Worley in the fourth. Four singles, two doubles — including one by Heyward that plated two runs — gave the Cardinals a 5-3 lead.

Martinez and the normally reliable bullpen couldn’t make it hold up. Walker pulled Pittsburgh within 5-4 with a solo shot in the fifth and Martinez’s control abandoned him in the sixth. A single and two walks loaded the bases for Mercer with one out. Maness came on but Mercer drilled an offering to center. Mercer clapped his hands as reached second with his biggest hit of the season.

Corey Hart added a sacrifice fly and Pittsburgh’s bullpen took care of the rest.

TRIPLE TROUBLE

The Pirates turned the first 4-5-4 triple play in the top of the second with a little help from the Cardinals. St. Louis had runners on second and third when Yadier Molina lined to second baseman Walker. Walker threw to third to double off Peralta. Heyward, who was on second, started walking off the field thinking the inning was over. Pittsburgh third baseman Jung Ho Kang pirouetted with the ball in his hand, briefly confused, before throwing back to Walker on second for the final out.

It was second triple play by the Pirates in as many years. St. Louis last hit into a triple play when Atlanta shortstop Rafael Furcal made an unassisted triple play on Aug. 10, 2003.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: 3B Matt Carpenter remained in St. Louis dealing with extreme fatigue. Manager Mike Matheny said he did not talk to Carpenter on Saturday. Carpenter is expected to rejoin the team on Tuesday in Cleveland. … LHP Marco Gonzalez lasted just 2 1/3 innings in a rehab start for Triple-A Memphis on Saturday. Gonzalez, out since April 22 with a pectoral injury, gave up four runs before being pulled after throwing 56 pitches.

Pirates: LF Starling Marte left the game after the third inning with what the team called “extreme dizziness.” Marte struck out twice in two plate appearances and was replaced by Sean Rodriguez … RHP Charlie Morton felt good a day after seven scoreless innings during a rehab start for Double-A Altoona. It’s still uncertain when Morton, who is recovering from hip surgery, will return.

UP NEXT

The series concludes on Sunday when Pittsburgh’s Jeff Locke (2-2, 4.85) faces St. Louis’ Tyler Lyons (0-0, 6.23 ERA). Locke is 2-2 with a 3.76 ERA in five starts against St. Louis. Holliday is 5 for 12 against Locke with a homer and four RBI. Lyons will make his second start for the Cardinals. He gave up four runs in 3 1/3 innings against the Cubs last week.

— Associated Press —

Pino’s throwing error in 9th costs KC series opener at Detroit

riggertRoyalsDETROIT (AP) — Reliever Yohan Pino, called up earlier in the day by Kansas City, threw wildly to first base, allowing Anthony Gose to score the winning run in the ninth inning as the Detroit Tigers beat the Royals 6-5 on Friday night.

Gose led off the ninth with a double on Pino’s first pitch, and on the next delivery, Ian Kinsler bunted down the third-base line. Pino (0-1) fielded the ball and threw wildly to first, allowing Gose to score the winning run.

Joakim Soria (2-0) earned the win with a scoreless ninth inning.

Tigers starter David Price allowed five runs and a career-high 13 hits before leaving the game in the seventh inning with a fluke injury. On the single by Alex Gordon that gave Kansas City a 5-4 lead, Price stepped on a discarded bat and appeared to injure his ankle.

The Tigers scored four times in the fourth inning despite two high-risk decisions by third-base coach Dave Clark. With the bases loaded and no outs, Andrew Romine singled to right, and Clark sent Nick Castellanos to the plate, even though he didn’t appear to have a chance to score.

Royals catcher Salvador Perez, though, couldn’t make a clean pickup of Paulo Orlando’s throw, then dropped the ball when he tagged Castellanos. After Gose’s infield single loaded the bases again, Kinsler hit a hard single to right and Clark sent Romine to the plate in another bad-looking move.

This time, Perez caught the ball too far up the first-base line, and Romine was able to slide around his tag, making it 4-0.

Perez made up for two of the runs in the fourth, hitting a long homer to left. Christian Colon added an RBI single, and the Royals tied the game when Castellanos threw away Lorenzo Cain’s two-out grounder to third.

Detroit threatened in the fifth, putting runners on the corners with one out, but Perez dug Colon’s throw out of the dirt and tagged Kinsler at the plate. Ventura struck out J.D. Martinez, dropping him to 0 for 25, to end the inning.

Gordon’s third hit of the game drove home Eric Hosmer with the go-ahead run in the seventh, and as Price was running to back up the throw at the plate, he stepped on Gordon’s bat. Detroit tied the game in the bottom of the inning on Victor Martinez’s RBI groundout.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: 3B Mike Moustakas will miss the weekend series with Detroit after being placed on the Bereavement/Family Emergency List. SS Alcides Escobar, though, returned from the Concussion DL and started Friday night. The Royals placed LHP Jason Vargas on the DL with a flexor strain and called up Pino from Triple-A Omaha.

Tigers: RHP Justin Verlander, who has not pitched this season with a triceps injury, threw on flat ground for the third straight day, extending to 90 feet. The Tigers have not set a timeline on his return. . RHP Bruce Rondon, who missed all last season after Tommy John surgery, has returned to Detroit after a setback in his return. Rondon is currently having soreness in his biceps, which the team does not believe is related to his elbow injury.

UP NEXT:

The teams meet in the second of a three-game series on Saturday afternoon, with Anibal Sanchez (2-3, 5.11) facing Kansas City’s Jeremy Guthrie (1-2, 6.52). They matched up on Sunday in Kansas City, with Sanchez and the Tigers winning 6-4. Sanchez is 6-2 with a 1.40 ERA in eight career starts against the Royals.

— Associated Press —

Holliday, Wong power Cardinals to 8-5 win over Pirates

riggertCardinalsPITTSBURGH (AP) — Matt Holliday and Kolten Wong hit three-run homers and Michael Wacha remained unbeaten as the St. Louis Cardinals held off the Pittsburgh Pirates 8-5 on Friday night.

Holliday sent a towering shot to left-center off Francisco Liriano (1-2) in the third inning and Wong put it away with a drive over the Clemente Wall in right off Arquimedes Caminero in the seventh. Jhonny Peralta also homered for the Cardinals, who have won 10 of 11.

Wong finished with three hits. Trevor Rosenthal worked the ninth for his 11th save as the Cardinals improved to a major-league best 22-7. Wacha (5-0) produced six workmanlike innings, giving up three runs and six hits with one strikeout.

Starling Marte had three hits for Pittsburgh and Andrew McCutchen, Neil Walker and Francisco Cervelli added two each.

The Pirates have dropped six of seven and eight of 10. Liriano struck out a season-high 10 but also gave up two homers as his ERA rose from 1.93 to 2.79.

The Cardinals swept Pittsburgh in three taut games in St. Louis last weekend, winning all three on extra-inning walk-off hits despite managing just seven runs the entire weekend. They topped that number the first seven innings on Friday.

Seven of St. Louis’ 11 hits went for extra bases, including two doubles by Peter Bourjos and doubles by Holliday and Wong.

Pittsburgh’s sputtering offense gave Liriano an early boost when Gregory Polanco scored on an error by St. Louis third baseman Pete Kozma in the first. Peralta’s fourth homer of the season clanged off the batter’s eye in center field about 440 feet from home to tie it in the second. Holliday put the Cardinals up 4-1 in the fourth after Wacha reached on an error and Bourjos doubled with a blast to the deepest part of PNC Park.

The Pirates climbed within 4-3 in the sixth when McCutchen scored on a fielders’ choice but the Cardinals broke it open in the seventh. Jon Jay hit a pinch-hit RBI-single to score Yadier Molina and chase Liriano. Caminero immediately gave up a double to Bourjos and Wong’s third homer of the year made it 8-3.

It was more than enough as the Cardinals moved nine games clear of the Pirates, who began the season expecting to challenge St. Louis’ dominant run in the NL Central after two straight wild-card finishes.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: 3B Matt Carpenter did not travel with the team to Pittsburgh due to what manager Mike Matheny called “extreme fatigue.” Carpenter had a scheduled day off on Thursday — the first game he did not start all season — but could return Tuesday when St. Louis begins a series in Cleveland. “I don’t think it’s a coincidence that we are in a stretch of playing 20 straight games,” Matheny said. “I don’t think it’s a coincidence that we’ve had a lot of tough games recently and I don’t think it’s a coincidence that he’s as hard of a worker as there is on this team.”

Pirates: RHP Charlie Morton was dominant during a rehab start with Double-A Altoona on Friday. Morton allowed two hits in seven shutout innings, walking two and striking out five. Morton is recovering from hip surgery. His last major league start was on Sept. 16, 2014.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: Carlos Martinez (3-0) will try to stay unbeaten when he makes his seventh start of the season for St. Louis. The 23-year-old Martinez has a 1.29 ERA on the road, the fourth-best mark in the National League.

Pirates: Vance Worley starts for the Pirates. Worley gave up one run in six innings of a no-decision against the Cardinals in his previous start last Sunday.

— Associated Press —

Royals defeat Indians 7-4, keep Kluber winless

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Eric Hosmer can’t believe Corey Kluber is still looking for his first victory.

Kluber, the reigning AL Cy Young Award winner, remained winless through seven starts this season when the Kansas City Royals beat the Cleveland Indians 7-4 on Thursday.

“It’s a guy you would never anticipate being 0-5, definitely not,” said Hosmer, who hit a three-run homer in the first inning. “He’s still got the same stuff as he did. He’s still really effective. He’s got the two-seamer, cutter and slider that he whips out the second and third time through.”

Hosmer hit a 2-0 pitch for the homer.

“When you get behind a guy 2-0 with two guys on, you can’t really be picky there,” Kluber said. “I’m going out there trying to attack guys and he put a good swing on it.”

Kluber (0-5) matched the record for most winless starts by a pitcher after winning a Cy Young. Zack Greinke in 2010 and Frank Viola in 1989 also went seven straight without a victory.

“I think we all know that he’s our guy,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. “When we get where we want to be, he’ll be a huge part of it. Whatever your record is, you have to live with that. That is part of the game.”

Kluber gave up five runs, seven hits and two walks in 5 2/3 innings, and left with a 5.04 ERA. In his past four starts, Kluber has a 7.43 ERA, yielding 38 hits and 19 earned runs in 23 innings.

The Cleveland ace went 18-9 with a 2.44 ERA last year.

Franklin Morales (3-0) won with two scoreless innings of relief.

Luke Hochevar, who just came off the disabled list following shoulder surgery, pitched a scoreless sixth, striking out two. It was his first appearance since Sept. 29, 2013.

“I had an adrenaline rush especially in a spot like that (a one-run lead),” Hochevar said. “I didn’t feel too pumped up or too juiced up. I was just excited to be on the mound.”

Greg Holland worked a spotless ninth to collect his fifth save in as many chances.

Rain delayed the start of the game by 2 hours, 17 minutes.

Hosmer hit three home runs and drove in 10 runs in the seven-game homestand.

Royals starter Edinson Volquez lasted just three innings after walking six, including Donnie Murphy and Michael Bourn with the bases loaded in the second. He entered the game averaging 2.1 walks per nine innings. Volquez had a blister on his right thumb that popped in the third inning.

“I asked the trainers if he would miss a start and right away they said no,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.

Volquez said he has had the blister “in the same spot” in previous years.

“I’ve been dealing with it the last couple of starts, but today was the worst,” Volquez said.

Carlos Santana homered in the seventh, cutting the Royals’ lead to one run. The Royals responded with Omar Infante’s two-run double in the bottom of the inning.

SUSPENSION REDUCED

Royals RHP Kelvin Herrera had his seven-game suspension for incidents, April 19 against Oakland and April 23 at Chicago, reduced to six games after his appeal.

ROYALS OBTAIN CATCHER

The Royals acquired C Drew Butera from the Angels for minor league IF Ryan Jackson. Butera hit .190 in 10 games with the Angels.

COMMISSIONER VISITS

Commissioner Rob Manfred, who is touring all MLB parks, stopped in at Kauffman Stadium. “I think the success Kansas City had last year and the great start they’re off to this year, and the fact that they have a strategy that is sustainable in our system, it says a lot about the health of our industry,” Manfred said. “I would be remiss if I didn’t point out it takes foresight and diligence to accomplish what (owner) David Glass, (president) Dan Glass and (general manager) Dayton (Moore) have accomplished. While I do believe we have a system within which you can draft and acquire young talent, it’s still a tall order to accomplish that in the way they have here.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Indians: With LHP T.J. House (shoulder inflammation) on the DL, LHP Bruce Chen will start Saturday against the Twins.

Royals: SS Alcides Escobar remains on the concussion list, waiting results of Thursday tests.

UP NEXT

Indians: RHP Trevor Bauer, who starts Friday against the Twins, has a 6.06 ERA in three Progressive Field starts.

Royals: RHP Yordano Ventura will make his first start Friday since April 29, after completing his seven-game suspension.

— Associated Press —

Lackey leads St. Louis past Cubs in series finale

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — John Lackey gave the St. Louis Cardinals bullpen a much needed break. He made his own breaks, too.

Lackey drove in a run for the third time in his big league career and struck out 10 in 7 2/3 innings, helping the Cardinals beat the Chicago Cubs 5-1 Thursday for their ninth win in 10 games.

“I’d like to finish them all,” Lackey said. “There might be a little bit more importance on it because of the last few days, I guess.”

St. Louis relievers worked 35 innings the previous seven days. Three pitchers failed to make it through the fifth during that stretch.

“All the way around, just exactly what our staff needed,” manager Mike Matheny said. “Today was one of his best.”

Jason Heyward singled three times with an RBI, and Peter Bourjos hit a run-scoring triple for the NL Central leaders, who took three of four from the second-place Cubs and improved their record to a major league-best 21-7.

Lackey had been 6 for 67 at the plate in 13 major league seasons before a two-out, opposite-field RBI double to right in the fourth. He wasn’t exactly bragging about getting the best of Jake Arrieta.

“That guy’s got great stuff,” Lackey said. “I was late and got lucky and went down the line.”

Bourjos, who had been on first base, scored for a 4-0 lead on an error by Jorge Soler who, with his back to the plate, missed the ball as he tried to glove it between his legs near the foul line.

The double was the third extra-base hit for the 36-year-old Lackey, who has played most of his entire career in the American League.

Lackey (2-1) allowed one run and five hits, reaching double digits for the 18th time. After the Cubs put two on against in the ninth, Trevor Rosenthal relieved and got three straight outs — two on strikeouts — for his 10th save in 11 chances.

Arrieta (3-3) gave up five runs — four earned — and nine hits in 5 1/3 innings. Starlin Castro drove in a run for the Cubs, who have lost five of their last six games.

They won their lone game of the series by a run and lost by one, three and four runs. Manager Joe Maddon was in a pretty good mood.

“We’ve just celebrated Cinco de Mayo and that’s an indicator of what’s going on with your team,” Maddon said. “I’m pretty happy and I wasn’t drinking. It had nothing to do with Coronas with limes.”

St. Louis built on a 2-0 lead in the second when Heyward hit an RBI single and scored on Bourjos’ triple.

Kris Bryant fanned three times and Matt Szczur twice for the Cubs, who struck out 12 times and raised their total to 263, passing Houston for the major league lead.

“I have zero concerns,” Maddon said. “The hitters will start figuring some of this stuff out as they get more ABs. I could not be happier with them as a group.”

St. Louis’ Matt Carpenter 1 for 12 in the series with a three-run homer on Tuesday, was given a day off, as was Matt Holliday, who was 6 for 12 in the series.

UP NEXT

Cubs: Jason Hammel (2-1, 3.73) starts Friday at Milwaukee. He is 5-0 with a 2.20 ERA in seven starts against the Brewers.

Cardinals: Michael Wacha (4-0, 1.93) starts Friday at Pittsburgh. He pitched 6 2/3 scoreless innings against the Pirates on Sunday in the Cardinals’ 14-inning victory.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cubs: Justin Grimm made his season debut, a day after being activated from the DL following a forearm injury. Dexter Fowler, in a 2 for 23 slump, grounded as a pinch hitter in the seventh.

Cardinals: Lefty Marco Gonzales (shoulder) will make a rehab start Saturday for Triple-A Iowa.

— Associated Press —

Duffy, Royals roughed up by Cleveland Wednesday 10-3

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Just about everyone in the Cleveland lineup drove in a run, Carlos Carrasco tossed seven sharp innings and the Indians rolled to a 10-3 win over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday night.

Brandon Moss homered and added a two-run double to lead the charge, but six other Indians also drove in runs, helping Carrasco (4-2) end a three-game skid against the Royals.

He gave up a two-run homer to Kendrys Morales, but otherwise shut down a Kansas City lineup that returned hot-hitting outfielder Lorenzo Cain from a two-game suspension.

Cleveland had already taken a 4-0 lead when Danny Duffy (2-1) was yanked after facing five batters without getting an out in the second. The Royals’ bullpen briefly slowed the onslaught, but the Indians added four more runs in the seventh to put the game away.

Duffy struggled with his command right from the start.

Carlos Santana scored on a wild pitch in the first inning, and the Indians banged out four more hits around a hit batter in the second to knock Duffy from the game.

Nick Swisher led off with a single, his first hit since returning from knee surgery last August. Mike Aviles was hit by a pitch, Lonnie Chisenhall doubled to drive in a run, and Brett Hayes and Jason Kipnis added back-to-back RBI singles to give the Indians a 4-0 lead.

Duffy actually plunked two batters, nailing Ryan Raburn in the first inning. The lefty also allowed six hits without a strikeout in one of the worst outings of his career.

Santana added a sacrifice fly off reliever Brandon Finnegan in the fourth.

Kansas City’s stingy bullpen kept the Indians from extending their lead for a while, and Morales started whittling into it with his two-run shot in the fourth.

The Royals looked as though they were going to take another gouge out of the lead in the sixth when Eric Hosmer ripped an RBI double down the left-field line. Morales walked to put runners on first and second, but Carrasco got Salvador Perez to ground out, ending the threat.

The Indians then added four more runs off Franklin Morales in the seventh.

Just about the only good news for Kansas City was the return of reliever Greg Holland from the disabled list. He’d been out since April 18 with a strained pectoral muscle.

The Indians made sure the All-Star closer wasn’t a factor.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Indians: LHP Bruce Chen will start Saturday against Minnesota in place of T.J. House, who’s on the DL with a sore left shoulder.

Royals: C Erik Kratz (plantar fasciitis) went on the DL, retroactive to Sunday. C Francisco Pena was recalled from Triple-A Omaha.

UP NEXT

Indians: AL Cy Young Award winner Corey Kluber (0-4, 4.62 ERA) tries to straighten out his season in the series finale. He lost to the Royals on April 27.

Royals: RHP Edinson Volquez (2-3) tries to improve on his 2.10 ERA, seventh-best in the American League. He’s 2-1 with a 1.71 ERA at home this season.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals 8-game win streak ends with 6-4 loss to Cubs

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Anthony Rizzo homered with three RBIs and Jon Lester had a strong outing for the Chicago Cubs, who ended the St. Louis Cardinals’ eight-game winning streak and their own four-game skid with a 6-4 victory on Wednesday night.

Jhonny Peralta hit a 447-foot homer and Yadier Molina had two hits and two RBIs for the Cardinals, who erased deficits of five and three runs the first two games of the four-game series but couldn’t quite make up a three-run, fifth-inning deficit. Lance Lynn (1-3) allowed five runs in six innings.

St. Louis put runners on the corners with one out in the ninth before Hector Rondon escaped for his sixth save in seven chances.

The Cardinals entered a major league-best 20-6, the best start for the franchise since 1900, with a 6 1-2-game lead in the NL Central. They’re 13-3 at home.

Lester (2-2) left leading 5-4 after seven innings but only one of the runs was earned against the team he dominated in St. Louis in Game 5 of the 2013 World Series. The pitcher’s fielding error covering first led to a run in the second and second baseman Addison Russell missed a liner for a fielding error that led to two more runs in the sixth.

Rizzo hit his fifth homer, and third in five games, in the third and added a two-run double in the fifth. He also homered in the series opener Monday and had three hits and a walk on Tuesday.

Two-out RBI singles by Molina and Pete Kozma cut the deficit to 5-4 in the sixth and pinch-hitter Kolten Wong’s RBI single off Pedro Strop in the eighth again shaved it to 6-5.

Molina has 82 RBIs against the Cubs, most against any opponent.

UP NEXT

Cubs: Jake Arrieta (3-2, 2.84) makes his sixth start of the year, all vs. NL Central opponents, and is 3-0 with an 0.74 ERA in six career starts against St. Louis. He gave up a season-high four runs in his last start.

Cardinals: John Lackey (1-1, 3.69) makes his second straight start in a day game.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cubs: Manager Joe Maddon said Junior Lake was demoted to Triple-A Iowa to get regular playing time. He believes call-up Matt Szczur was better equipped to play off the bench.

Cardinals: Two potential rotation replacements for Adam Wainwright, lefties Marco Gonzales and Jaime Garcia, begin rehab assignments from shoulder injuries this weekend with Triple-A Memphis.

— Associated Press —

Hosmer powers Royals past Cleveland 5-3

riggertRoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Eric Hosmer hit a three-run homer, Jason Vargas shut down the Indians for the second straight start, and the Kansas City Royals went on to beat Cleveland 5-3 on Tuesday night.

Hosmer also had an RBI triple in the eighth inning, and Alex Gordon drove in another run for the Royals, who bounced back nicely after losing two straight to Detroit over the weekend.

Vargas (3-1) only allowed two hits, one a two-run shot by Michael Brantley, over six stingy innings. He struck out five while walking two and was rarely in trouble.

Ryan Madson pitched a perfect seventh for Kansas City, but Kelvin Herrera served up a homer to Lonnie Chisenhall in the eighth, ending his streak of 105 1/3 innings without allowing one.

Herrera still handed over a lead to Wade Davis, though. He cruised through the ninth inning in place of injured All-Star closer Greg Holland for his sixth save.

The Indians’ Danny Salazar (3-1) gave up Hosmer’s homer, but was just as tough as Vargas most of the night. He allowed four runs on five hits in seven innings, striking out nine.

Things started promising for the Indians when Carlos Santana worked a one-out walk and Brantley stepped to the plate in the first. He caught a hanging 1-1 pitch from Vargas and managed to guide it just inside the left-field foul pole to give the Indians a 2-0 lead.

The advantage sure didn’t last for long.

Gordon led off the bottom half with a base hit, and Kendrys Morales was plunked by Salazar, before Hosmer stepped to the plate and took a mighty chop at a 2-0 pitch. The ball soared over the wall in left-center, splashing into the fountains more than 415 feet away.

It was Hosmer’s fourth homer of the year. He had nine all of last season.

That was plenty of offense for Vargas, who built on a solid start against the Indians last Monday. After allowing two runs on three hits in five innings in that 6-2 victory, he turned to pinpoint accuracy and veteran guile to flummox the Indians on Tuesday night.

Vargas retired 14 of 15 batters between Brantley’s homer and Jason Kipnis’ double.

PENALTY BOX

The Royals played their second straight without OF Lorenzo Cain, who is serving a suspension for throwing a punch in a brawl with the White Sox. He is eligible to return Wednesday night.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Indians: DH Nick Swisher (knee surgery) was activated from the disabled list. He went 0 for 4, striking out to end the game. … C Yan Gomes (sprained knee ligament) threw to second from a crouch before the game, another step forward in his rehab.

Royals: Holland (strained pectoral muscle) is expected to come off the DL on Wednesday. … SS Alcides Escobar is still waiting for MLB’s doctors to clear him following a concussion. He is eligible to return Thursday. “Raring to go,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.

UP NEXT:

Indians: RHP Carlos Carrasco tries to turn around his fortunes against the Royals. He is 2-4 with a 4.82 ERA in 12 career appearances, including 0-2 last season.

Royals: LHP Danny Duffy carried a shutout into the eighth inning in an 8-1 win over Detroit his last time out. He is 2-1 with a 2.61 ERA against the Indians.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis rallies past Chicago again for eighth straight win

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Pinch-hitter Mark Reynolds doubled off the wall in center field to snap a tie in the sixth inning and the St. Louis Cardinals rallied from three runs down to beat the Chicago Cubs 7-4 on Tuesday night, their eighth straight victory.

Matt Carpenter of St. Louis tied the game with a three-run homer off Kyle Hendricks in the fifth and finished with four RBIs. Kolten Wong added an RBI in the seventh on an infield single, his third hit of the game, and Trevor Rosenthal earned his ninth save in 10 chances.

Anthony Rizzo had three hits and a walk but grounded out with the bases loaded against Miguel Socolovich to end the eighth. Starlin Castro had two RBIs on a forceout in the fifth when the Cardinals couldn’t quite turn a double play and rookie Kris Bryant scored from second. The Cubs have lost a season-long four straight.

— Associated Press —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File